13
13
Aug 7, 2024
08/24
by
IRINN
tv
eye 13
favorite 0
quote 0
juveniles of the children's center, juveniles, islamic unions, public books institute of the country and public libraries of tehran municipality will be able to evaluate works. also , the reh festival was mostly in the field of welfare. lisar separated himself from him in time. we are talking to each other. mrs. mehrafar works in this department. senior journalists of sada vasima news agency have a message on friday. hello, good morning. have a blessed day. hello and good morning to all the good viewers of khabar network , thank you and also let me congratulate this day to all my journalist colleagues all over the country who are hardworking and trying to be the eyes and ears of public opinion and the eyes and ears of the people. i hope that they can be successful in this field as much as possible. i was not at home and i was on provincial trips and government trips. yes, tell me about the hardships of this part of rome . maybe some people think that, for example, a journalist from the government field can see the conditions. say, from his last incident, he can understand what risks
juveniles of the children's center, juveniles, islamic unions, public books institute of the country and public libraries of tehran municipality will be able to evaluate works. also , the reh festival was mostly in the field of welfare. lisar separated himself from him in time. we are talking to each other. mrs. mehrafar works in this department. senior journalists of sada vasima news agency have a message on friday. hello, good morning. have a blessed day. hello and good morning to all the...
21
21
Aug 10, 2024
08/24
by
IRINN
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
book. institution of public libraries of the country, considering the capacity and huge, wide and diverse networkhas, both in terms of the physical location of the libraries, which is about 3,700, and the family, in terms of people and experts , we have about 7,000 colleagues, and about a lot now. it is being used and a big part is the use of cultural and artistic capacities, that is, to us for every human being in front of us. we can have ideas and creativity to promote book reading and book friendship. one of these cultural and artistic branches that can be used is the discussion of visual arts, painting, drawing one of its most important branches is cartoonist and caricature, because it is an international language and it can promote importance and status in the field of art. the importance of books and libraries is its importance and necessity , why is a group like the institution of libraries doing this, let's get inside this event that we are serving you, it is the sixth biennial event , that is, it has been held 5 times since 2019 and now we have we are doing this for the sixth time . it i
book. institution of public libraries of the country, considering the capacity and huge, wide and diverse networkhas, both in terms of the physical location of the libraries, which is about 3,700, and the family, in terms of people and experts , we have about 7,000 colleagues, and about a lot now. it is being used and a big part is the use of cultural and artistic capacities, that is, to us for every human being in front of us. we can have ideas and creativity to promote book reading and book...
25
25
Aug 13, 2024
08/24
by
IRINN
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
families in the book of killing the community seyyed al-shahada and its excerpts have been published several times by the publications of imam khomeini's educational research institute. mohammad melabi, qom sed and sima news agency. thank you for your companionship, dear viewers . have a good time with the news. god bless you. after the martyrdom of imam hussain, peace be upon him, the first arbaeen pilgrimage by jaber bin abdullah ansari. with atiya bin kufi or ufi, who was one of the scholars of that time, atiya. it is a man's name, not a woman. exactly 40 days after ashura, next to jabir's footsteps, at the same time as jabir, the caravan of the ahl al-bayt of imam hussain , peace be upon him, comes to karbala for arbaeen pilgrimage, and this coming was on foot, and it became the same tradition that the others even the research that has been done, this tradition was similar to rabab during the time of umayyads and banu al-abbas. later, a narration from imam hasan askari , peace be upon him , who enumerated the five signs of a believer, increased the interest of shiites in visiting the arbaeen pilgrimage. the prophet said that one of the signs of a believer is the
families in the book of killing the community seyyed al-shahada and its excerpts have been published several times by the publications of imam khomeini's educational research institute. mohammad melabi, qom sed and sima news agency. thank you for your companionship, dear viewers . have a good time with the news. god bless you. after the martyrdom of imam hussain, peace be upon him, the first arbaeen pilgrimage by jaber bin abdullah ansari. with atiya bin kufi or ufi, who was one of the scholars...
10
10.0
Aug 28, 2024
08/24
by
IRINN
tv
eye 10
favorite 0
quote 0
book collection. the late ayatollah naseri , rahmatullah aleihi , was published by khalq publications with the cooperation of a group of researchers from the had scientific institute sadad hashemi, isfahan radio and television news agency, simultaneously with the last decade of travel and martyrdom days of imam reza , peace be upon him, a two-day conference on ethics and education in the life and teachings of razavi has started at the qom office of astan quds razavi scientific and cultural organization. became. in a message to this conference, ayatollah arafi, the director of awadah, said: the ethics of imam reza, peace be upon him , embodied in his speech and behavior, is a model. it is perfect for the world. our conference, which was seen under the title of ethics and education in the life and teachings of imam reza, peace be upon him, is necessary due to the fact that ethics sometimes feels like a missing link in society. religion and if we have to go towards it and form a community of faith and form the most perfect example of those innocent gentlemen (peace be upon them) and we are at the head of the table of imam reza (peace be upon them) and with the discus
book collection. the late ayatollah naseri , rahmatullah aleihi , was published by khalq publications with the cooperation of a group of researchers from the had scientific institute sadad hashemi, isfahan radio and television news agency, simultaneously with the last decade of travel and martyrdom days of imam reza , peace be upon him, a two-day conference on ethics and education in the life and teachings of razavi has started at the qom office of astan quds razavi scientific and cultural...
27
27
Aug 6, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 27
favorite 0
quote 0
won the election and they did it and it's not surprising that the public thinks the court is also a political institution, i say in the book, who makes all of the important decisions in the country, they probably say the courts, that's really wrong. i mean, it's right but it's really bad. >> and has your wife thrown any flags or -- how do you handle -- how do you handle these -- these ethics issues whenen people offr you expensive goodies and such. >> well, let me -- maybe answer the question by just saying how i handled, well, first of all, no one has ever offered me. [laughter] >> an indonesian cruise, in fact, the only money i made we were in a play together and it was under a union contract and i got $500 and i put it on my disclosure form. let me just explain take a secondnd and tell you how i as a judge and involved the case, the dc circuit had before it, the question was whether the court would organize the treasury department to comply with the federal law that required paper currency, you remember what that stuff is, to be accessible to appointt people. i can't -- i cannot tell a 10 from a 20 without asking somebo
won the election and they did it and it's not surprising that the public thinks the court is also a political institution, i say in the book, who makes all of the important decisions in the country, they probably say the courts, that's really wrong. i mean, it's right but it's really bad. >> and has your wife thrown any flags or -- how do you handle -- how do you handle these -- these ethics issues whenen people offr you expensive goodies and such. >> well, let me -- maybe answer...
16
16
Aug 30, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
institution. so it's it's a book for all seasons and it's book for young people who are you know, contemplating beginning a career and thinking about public service and for other older people who are sort of assessing or analyzing life's choices and and assessing a life, so, i begin with very pedestrian questions. why a book why this book? why now? why? title why this cover? okay, well. why now? well, the frank and i were involved in the renovation of this library. and that we completed that work about four years ago and it dawned on me as i was doing that work with frank that richard nixon was really only known for two things. china opening it or watergate. and through the renovation process it became we learned so much more about him. we knew it but it kind of flagged it in our minds. and so i i felt after finishing the project that i had an obligation to history to put down what i saw and put it into my words one of the unique things about my book is most people writing these memoirs do it 10 minutes after they leave the white house. i i had been out 50 years. and so i i had a sense of perspective and i was able to take and to put that
institution. so it's it's a book for all seasons and it's book for young people who are you know, contemplating beginning a career and thinking about public service and for other older people who are sort of assessing or analyzing life's choices and and assessing a life, so, i begin with very pedestrian questions. why a book why this book? why now? why? title why this cover? okay, well. why now? well, the frank and i were involved in the renovation of this library. and that we completed that...
19
19
Aug 10, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 19
favorite 0
quote 0
public. i wrote a book in 2020 about the breakdown of our institutions and of our trust in them. and as i say that, i do notice that all these problems have gotten worse over that time. so i should probably stop writing these books. but the path of these books for me has been a kind of path from diagnosis toward prescription, from thinking about how things have come apart to thinking at least some about how they might be brought back together. and this new book for me is a kind of natural next step on that path. it's about what it would mean to be a more unified society. now and how that might actually be brought about, at least in our political life, which is, of course, only part of our life together. and it also draws on an argument that was central to the second of those books that i mentioned, a book called the fractured republic from 2016 that argued in part that we have moved in our public life in america from a long period that began in the middle of the 20th century, in which something like liberalization was the moving force of our politics, cultural liberalization for
public. i wrote a book in 2020 about the breakdown of our institutions and of our trust in them. and as i say that, i do notice that all these problems have gotten worse over that time. so i should probably stop writing these books. but the path of these books for me has been a kind of path from diagnosis toward prescription, from thinking about how things have come apart to thinking at least some about how they might be brought back together. and this new book for me is a kind of natural next...
29
29
Aug 7, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
public service. >> good morning, everyone. thank you for joining us today to talk about corey deangelis' book, let's think back 100 years, 1922 was a low point in american education. that year, oregon instituted a compulsory attendance law at that required all children to attend a public school under penalty of their parents' fine or imprisonment. that law would have outright prohibited children from going to a private school, from getting education from anyone other than the state. and thankfully this was america and there was swift pushback. will guthrey said that the law with the destruction of principle authority, the destandardization of education, despite the aptitude inclination and capacity of children and monopolizization by the state of training and teaching of the young. the oregon law, if upheld would have created a state monopoly at a nation, editorialized the new york world at the time. the supreme court agreed and held in the society of sisters that the oregon law was unconstitutional. it was in pierce that we get some of the most important and poetic language about parental rights and education. as pierce held, the fundamental theory upon which all governments and this union r
public service. >> good morning, everyone. thank you for joining us today to talk about corey deangelis' book, let's think back 100 years, 1922 was a low point in american education. that year, oregon instituted a compulsory attendance law at that required all children to attend a public school under penalty of their parents' fine or imprisonment. that law would have outright prohibited children from going to a private school, from getting education from anyone other than the state. and...
5
5.0
Aug 29, 2024
08/24
by
PRESSTV
tv
eye 5
favorite 0
quote 0
institutions, just he nationalized huge amounts of industries, public investment, and he was eventually even praised by the world bank and imf because of the economic success, but the chapter in the book is about how the united states, the racket were trying to destroy him and very nearly did, there was a there was an attempted coup in 2008, so two years into his presidency, and there was all sorts of uh subversion happening and and and the book goes into it in very sort of granular detail and you can be specific about this, this racket which enforced is us corporate power and western corporate power in has they have names like the usaid national endowerment for democracy cia us embassy all these different actors have huge huge role in in in guiding democracy to into the interest of the americans and the the the the amazing thing is i think that the best way to understand systems is when they stop operating as they should and ever ever morales was the system not operated not. operating as it should, and what happened, all those institutions that were told promote democracy and freedom like usa, national end for democracy, they had to come out of the shadows and be quite explicit about
institutions, just he nationalized huge amounts of industries, public investment, and he was eventually even praised by the world bank and imf because of the economic success, but the chapter in the book is about how the united states, the racket were trying to destroy him and very nearly did, there was a there was an attempted coup in 2008, so two years into his presidency, and there was all sorts of uh subversion happening and and and the book goes into it in very sort of granular detail and...
19
19
Aug 16, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 19
favorite 0
quote 0
in my book i talk a lot about public private governance, church state governance, thinking about religious institutionsoften do the work of government. and i would add religious individuals will do the work of government. so in the case of what i study, which is refugee resettlement, the government actually outsources a lot of work to religious which then outsource to congregations and religious people do the work of the state. and once again, as i read book, i realize there's a longer history of. religious individuals and institutions doing the work of the state in one way or another, and also sacrificing and obscuring the sins of the state. so when detail that i can't let go of is when missionaries were talking about the colonization of the philippines. they were saying, wow, this is just so private. so can you believe that? god just gave us this mission field in our lap? wow. what was interesting is the same providential language was used later on in the late 20th century when people who were well aware of war being fought by the u.s. in southeast asia, said, well can you believe that god just dropp
in my book i talk a lot about public private governance, church state governance, thinking about religious institutionsoften do the work of government. and i would add religious individuals will do the work of government. so in the case of what i study, which is refugee resettlement, the government actually outsources a lot of work to religious which then outsource to congregations and religious people do the work of the state. and once again, as i read book, i realize there's a longer history...
22
22
Aug 23, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 22
favorite 0
quote 0
either at a public or private session sometime, but let's give a round of applause for the group, thank you can for come out to hudson institute today. thank you. [applause] >> the national bookival kicks off this evening with librarian of congress carla hayden talking with some of the authors appearing at the festival including pulitzer prize winner doris kearns goodwin and television host tamron hall. watch live coverage of the opening ceremony at 6:30 p.m. easternn c-span2. >> thisftnoon 2024 republican presidential nominee donald trump speaks to voters i glendale, arizona. the state gave its 11 11 elecl votes to the former president in 2016 but was one i president biden in 2020. uan watch the campaign valley live at 7 p.m. eastern on c-span, she's beenut our free mobile video at or online at c-span.org. >> sunday on q&a we sat down with -- author of breaking barriers with chile about the history of the washington d.c. landmark. >> april 4, 1968, did you stay open? >> yes. we were the only place that was allowed to remain open. >> allowed to remain open? >> actually asked to remain open. with dr. king, they wanted everything close in d.c. that uprising took place, we left
either at a public or private session sometime, but let's give a round of applause for the group, thank you can for come out to hudson institute today. thank you. [applause] >> the national bookival kicks off this evening with librarian of congress carla hayden talking with some of the authors appearing at the festival including pulitzer prize winner doris kearns goodwin and television host tamron hall. watch live coverage of the opening ceremony at 6:30 p.m. easternn c-span2. >>...
15
15
Aug 17, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
public service. right everybody, welcome to the american enterprise institute. it is my pleasure to welcome you to tim carney's wonderful important new bookmily unfriendly. how our culture made raising kids much t harder than it needs to be. the calmness of the washington examiner. his work is a lot of us know focuses on family and community. civil society on religion and american politics. he has been published widely in the "new york times" and wall street journal, russian post, atlantic at l3 seem on tv a lot. tim's work is unique. he describes a broad social trends by beginning from the experience of real people. he thanks in the bottom up not from a top-down pay for that reason he has an understanding of how people thrive and how people fail. what holds us together. what divides us deeply humane and sympathetic. even as it's always rooted in a moral fundamental. his goal is to prove his grandmother is right. if you want to be happy you should get married you should have kids. you should go to church. he should show up for your neighbors and treat people well. but he also wants to explore what is about modern life that makes it so har
public service. right everybody, welcome to the american enterprise institute. it is my pleasure to welcome you to tim carney's wonderful important new bookmily unfriendly. how our culture made raising kids much t harder than it needs to be. the calmness of the washington examiner. his work is a lot of us know focuses on family and community. civil society on religion and american politics. he has been published widely in the "new york times" and wall street journal, russian post,...
15
15
Aug 18, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
institute. and it's a contributor to wired cnn and politico. he's written for publications from esquire to rolling stone to the new york times. garrett graff is the author of multiple books including another new york times bestseller the only plane in the sky. please welcome mark thompson and garrett graff. well enough goth good afternoon everyone and good afternoon garrett. um, let's just begin. this book's called watergate a new history. why did the world need a new history you pretty much every put every single person in this book. it seems not literally but rhoda might a memoir they've been lots and lots of of histories of every kind. so why why are new history? yeah, so it's it's a natural question and it's one that i this as you said is not the most obvious target for a big sweeping book except as it turns out it is and there was her two reasons that drew me to this as a topic i have spent the last five years as a journalist covering trump and russia and the mueller investigation and sort of all of the various aspects of that. and it made me interested in. last time that our nation confronted a moment like that in terms of how the institutions of american governmen
institute. and it's a contributor to wired cnn and politico. he's written for publications from esquire to rolling stone to the new york times. garrett graff is the author of multiple books including another new york times bestseller the only plane in the sky. please welcome mark thompson and garrett graff. well enough goth good afternoon everyone and good afternoon garrett. um, let's just begin. this book's called watergate a new history. why did the world need a new history you pretty much...
28
28
Aug 6, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
public service. >> hello everyone i am steven i am a senior fellow here at the hoover institution. i'm the director of the hoover history lab which is the sponsor of today's bookalk. those who know historians are money it's a prolific scholar of consequential history. the origins of the cold war. moser was not leverage but in general the onset of great power relations by atomic powers. then he moved on to the sign two sons in the heavens, if only. we don't got unwanted visionaries a story of the failures of the soviet union in post-soviet russia and east asia. the dreams, the hopes and that failure to realize those dreams. it's around the world as you can see the cold war for global power the three earlier books in many ways set up this a monumental task conference on the cold war organized by your senior fellowgu colleague fergun those who know what scotsmen look n like won't know that neil is with us right behind. we will pass around the backs of get acquainted with it. i can tell you many things john hopkins school of advanced international studies third the kissinger h center of advanced international studies goes back and forth burrito's multiple language
public service. >> hello everyone i am steven i am a senior fellow here at the hoover institution. i'm the director of the hoover history lab which is the sponsor of today's bookalk. those who know historians are money it's a prolific scholar of consequential history. the origins of the cold war. moser was not leverage but in general the onset of great power relations by atomic powers. then he moved on to the sign two sons in the heavens, if only. we don't got unwanted visionaries a story...
34
34
Aug 5, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 34
favorite 0
quote 0
public service. >> hello, everyone. i'm stephen kotkin. i'm a senior fellow at the hoover institution on the stanford campus and amla also te director of the hoover history lab which iss the sponsor of today's book talk, sergey radchenko, "to run the world." for those of you who are historians you will know already, sergey is a prolific scholar of consequential history. he co-authored the atomic bomb, and the origins of the cold war. really important work in the archives showing the extent to which the atomic bomb was or was not leveraged in not just the origin of the cold war but in general the onset of great power relations by atomic powers. then he moved on to the sino-soviet split, to make sense in the heavens. if only. we then got unwanted visionaries. , a story of the failures of the soviet union and in post-soviet russia in east asia. the dreams or the hopes, the fantasies but the failure to realize of those dreams. and today as i said we have to run the world. as you can see the kremlin's cold war bid for global power. so the three earlier books in many ways set up this monumental task of history. we are very lucky to have sergey here today. a part of the initiative that is probably tomo
public service. >> hello, everyone. i'm stephen kotkin. i'm a senior fellow at the hoover institution on the stanford campus and amla also te director of the hoover history lab which iss the sponsor of today's book talk, sergey radchenko, "to run the world." for those of you who are historians you will know already, sergey is a prolific scholar of consequential history. he co-authored the atomic bomb, and the origins of the cold war. really important work in the archives showing...