learn more about santa monica and other stops on our tour at sea spohn.org -- c-span.org. you are watching american history tv all weekend, every weekend on c-span3. >> next on the presidency, historians and economists discuss woodrow wilson's views on domestic policies, including women's and african-american rights, banking, and the federal reserve system. the wilson center in washington hosted this talk. it is about 1 hour and 20 minutes. >> this, i think, we'll see, i think may concentrate a little bit more back on wilson, himself. but believe me, it will be the legacies. it will be how he, what he did or didn't do, what others around him did or didn't do affect us very much. before i introduce the panelists, let me say something about why to concentrate on wilson's domestic presidency. first of all, that's the presidency he wanted to have and expected to have. one of his most famous remarks, which everybody who writes about him, practically, quotes, is an offhand remark he made after he was elected in 1912, to a former colleague. the quotation goes this way, and it's u