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after the three hundred year break the prussians resumed construction around the site entire streets houses were demolished to maximize the majestic buildings visual impact a new square was created and it quickly drew crowds of local residents. to show nations and the square is really popular and at the same time it's a local landmark so people are always reinterpreting it and using it to promote their own interests but i think the square is more than just a stage. and very close is me out on a big. the city permits six major events a year to be held outside the cathedral but these events must be compatible with the dignity of the church whether that criterion is met by every street artist is debatable here some musicians show up with unplugged fighters and play or sing the same song ten times a day we elect you can hear it in the confessionals where people come to pray and reflect which is in which to me ditto that's really disruptive no doubt about it. i never lost i'm fit into owner of. speaking of disruptive in the mid one nine hundred eighty s. the cathedral square became a rend
after the three hundred year break the prussians resumed construction around the site entire streets houses were demolished to maximize the majestic buildings visual impact a new square was created and it quickly drew crowds of local residents. to show nations and the square is really popular and at the same time it's a local landmark so people are always reinterpreting it and using it to promote their own interests but i think the square is more than just a stage. and very close is me out on a...
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when the german empire was founded in eight hundred seventy one the prussians emperor wanted to callhe world's attention to the new nation which extended as far west as the rhineland. could be the police the rhineland had been german territory since the middle ages but was also claimed by france the emperor needed a powerful symbol that represented german architecture and was located in the rhineland cologne cathedral fit the bill perfectly. good now in. so the cathedral construction project became a symbol of german nation building and therefore took on a new political significance. even today the cathedral often plays a symbolic role in various political efforts. in sr back in the one nine hundred sixty s. for example of the birth. going to evolve off and others including me held a religious service to protest the death penalty in spain. and we went into the cathedral said some prayers and held a kind of vigil for. the vigil led by nobel laureate hein of both made headlines tabloid press portrayed it as an occupation if you hold a political event at a major location it has a major
when the german empire was founded in eight hundred seventy one the prussians emperor wanted to callhe world's attention to the new nation which extended as far west as the rhineland. could be the police the rhineland had been german territory since the middle ages but was also claimed by france the emperor needed a powerful symbol that represented german architecture and was located in the rhineland cologne cathedral fit the bill perfectly. good now in. so the cathedral construction project...
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produce a single shred of evidence of the prussians somehow involved but you know last week i got plenty of calls from the b b c four or my channel four they all wanted to kind of use me as you know the other side and they just refuse the other side in their mind the problem is that the other side is supposed to be a lie and they needed who just doesn't want to recognize the all b.s. and the obvious is the most dreadful thing just i read the version from the times the version from the times is that putin is like henry the second who go up to these guys creepy delivered to him like foremost back it was delivered to kind of the second seventy they called me and they're asked me what i thought about it i said it was in d.c. and they didn't want to comment it but of course they will say he's afraid the second important person victor. was arrested in the early two thousand he was charged with espionage he was for the kill he was in pretty it wasn't a russian spy he was a british to which he was he was a russian military intelligence officer who defected to who spied for britain it was another
produce a single shred of evidence of the prussians somehow involved but you know last week i got plenty of calls from the b b c four or my channel four they all wanted to kind of use me as you know the other side and they just refuse the other side in their mind the problem is that the other side is supposed to be a lie and they needed who just doesn't want to recognize the all b.s. and the obvious is the most dreadful thing just i read the version from the times the version from the times is...
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one accusation was that germany would be giving iran money through the prussians cultural heritage foundation. titian it was amazing that the world's major museums pay low eighty's when loan fiends are expected then we say ok sorry we're out of that was clear to us from the outset and we quickly made it clear to our iranian colleagues that this is not about loan fees but about a serious calculation of an exhibition of this kind. only artworks being brought to berlin that dated from before nine hundred forty five were also checked for prominence. part singer the president of the pression cultural heritage foundation also had to deal with assertions that some of the works in iran were forgeries. and we'd heard that some works had allegedly been replaced with forgeries over the decades and that the originals had been sold for huge sums of money but you can't just say that these are bandits so it's hard to say anything about the much older history because of the importance of these works if they were to be sold abroad whether to museums or private parties i'd find it very hard to believe that you
one accusation was that germany would be giving iran money through the prussians cultural heritage foundation. titian it was amazing that the world's major museums pay low eighty's when loan fiends are expected then we say ok sorry we're out of that was clear to us from the outset and we quickly made it clear to our iranian colleagues that this is not about loan fees but about a serious calculation of an exhibition of this kind. only artworks being brought to berlin that dated from before nine...
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his statement i counted these twenty two russian to russia russia russia russia russia russia and prussian russian freshly can russian russian russian russians and russian russian the russian the russian russian russian russia and the russians is done for political purposes only and not house of catherine civilians everyone in the un security council seems to be in full agreement that the lives of civilians in eastern guta should be protected however there are some pretty strong disagreements about how that should be carried out and how and who is responsible for the situation there and we've heard some rather extreme rhetoric in the fifteen member body that leaves the united nations. donald trump is claimed his national secretary of commerce will discuss with the e.u. the bloc scrapping many of its tariffs against the united states this follows the president himself imposing new tariffs last day. important duties all steel and imported to the u.s. canada mexico in australia they've been excluded so far little terms now opening the door to negotiations with the european union and it looks
his statement i counted these twenty two russian to russia russia russia russia russia russia and prussian russian freshly can russian russian russian russians and russian russian the russian the russian russian russian russia and the russians is done for political purposes only and not house of catherine civilians everyone in the un security council seems to be in full agreement that the lives of civilians in eastern guta should be protected however there are some pretty strong disagreements...
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Mar 11, 2018
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i do not think they got lessons from the way that the prussian army did it, but this basically was you go out in the local area, and for us the local area as far as i knew was the state of washington and oregon, and parts of northern california. and so the division established its own recruiting unit. and i had, at the same time, we began to organize and reactivate the division itself and that -- and i happen to get the urge rifle company to reorganize under the volunteer army. >> what company? harry: second bravo, second of the 39th infantry. i believe. >> ok. what was that like standing above the company in a brand-new, or i guess he resurrected division? harry: it was a phenomenal experience. in many different ways. first of all, we had to transition from a conscript force to an all volunteer force. and the nature of the soldiers that you would be getting was much different. in vietnam, we had -- and prior -- we had a 50/50 split. 50 that was drafted and 50 volunteered. volunteers because they wanted to control when they would be drafted or not. about a 50/50 split. here nothing is
i do not think they got lessons from the way that the prussian army did it, but this basically was you go out in the local area, and for us the local area as far as i knew was the state of washington and oregon, and parts of northern california. and so the division established its own recruiting unit. and i had, at the same time, we began to organize and reactivate the division itself and that -- and i happen to get the urge rifle company to reorganize under the volunteer army. >> what...
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only to be with her hoover always had national films in his production plan that could be a period prussian film or a film about the first world war and these films were advertised as national films what has always been the underlying character of over now came into the open. as national films helps to dig the grave of democracy. he was about michelle who for always had nationalistic views most of the men on the board and in management had served in the military really tioga didn't aspire this was not a company that aimed to be subversive on the contrary. defied emil georg fun styles who had been the first head of who for in one nine hundred seventeen introduced hitler into. industrialist circles in the early thirties. alfred hugenberg became minister for economic affairs in his first cabinet. the footboard sent to congratulate three telegram. the film for the new regime had already being produced three days after hitler came to power hugenberg invited him and vice chancellor fun popping to the berlin premiere of dorn a nationalist submarine drama. concerned how are you going i am and you k
only to be with her hoover always had national films in his production plan that could be a period prussian film or a film about the first world war and these films were advertised as national films what has always been the underlying character of over now came into the open. as national films helps to dig the grave of democracy. he was about michelle who for always had nationalistic views most of the men on the board and in management had served in the military really tioga didn't aspire this...
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Mar 19, 2018
03/18
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a few weeks ago a lawyer pled guilty to lying to robert mueller's prussian probe.r was the biggest subsequent law firm in washington dc which worked on behalf of the former communist tyrant of ukraine, a puppet of vladimir. he is a perfect example of how the meat in washington who put themselves out for higher to any foreign government will pay them big bucks regardless of how corrupt they are, how oppressive the art or whether their aim is to hurt american. look was one of the prominent lawyers at swamp, president obama's former white house chief counsel. they are amateurs compared to the podesta group. for them? compounded by hillary clinton's german campaign and his brother but it shut down after the muller investigated started digging into it. memo to the media these clinton cronies were lobbying for russian interests years before donald trump campaigns and the podesta's also helped but a mere pittance puppet in ukraine and as we now know they lobbied for uranium one the company that got hillary's clinton approval to fight the% of our uranium supply but it is n
a few weeks ago a lawyer pled guilty to lying to robert mueller's prussian probe.r was the biggest subsequent law firm in washington dc which worked on behalf of the former communist tyrant of ukraine, a puppet of vladimir. he is a perfect example of how the meat in washington who put themselves out for higher to any foreign government will pay them big bucks regardless of how corrupt they are, how oppressive the art or whether their aim is to hurt american. look was one of the prominent...
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Mar 20, 2018
03/18
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they let a prussian professor in to do research, people just signed up to take a quiz and suddenly alliends are in the hands of the trump campaign. this makes no sense at all. they have to change their rules of the road. >> how do they explain that they just handed this information to a russian professor? i mean, what is -- i know that open internet but how do they explain that? >> that's why we want to have the hearing. we want to ask how, why, and how will you fix it? they have not explained it. >> >> as you look at this it seems from the outside almost as a business school case study of how not to manage a problem, i'm wondering what your sense is wrong at these social media companies, facebook in particular. their first instinct has seemed not to be to disclose but to withhold information, not to be transparent. they here in the transparency business. what about that part of it. do you think the fundamentals of how they operate need to be examined now? >> these are brilliant companies and they started out as a place where everyone could exchange information, the marketplace of info
they let a prussian professor in to do research, people just signed up to take a quiz and suddenly alliends are in the hands of the trump campaign. this makes no sense at all. they have to change their rules of the road. >> how do they explain that they just handed this information to a russian professor? i mean, what is -- i know that open internet but how do they explain that? >> that's why we want to have the hearing. we want to ask how, why, and how will you fix it? they have...