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told time magazine that he sees the rise of oslo and in ukraine similar to the rise of dangerous terror groups in afghanistan back in the early ninety's saying quote pretty soon the extremists took over the taliban was in charge and we did not wake up until $911.00 this is the parallel now with ukraine joining us to discuss the rise of the oz of battalion and the use of social media to build and recruit white supremacist groups is jeremy kumar of managing editor of covert action magazine and dr maya hoskins hoskins and haas can a 100 well hoskin forbes contributor and assistant professor at loyola marymount university in the school of education thank you both so much for coming on and joining us today. thanks for having me. jeremy and i want to start with you what is the cause of battalions history in regards to neo nazi ism and what role debate played today in the cultivation of white supremacy groups around the world. well my understanding is that the you know the war in eastern ukraine is a dirty war it hasn't been really very well covered in united states media but there's been a lo
told time magazine that he sees the rise of oslo and in ukraine similar to the rise of dangerous terror groups in afghanistan back in the early ninety's saying quote pretty soon the extremists took over the taliban was in charge and we did not wake up until $911.00 this is the parallel now with ukraine joining us to discuss the rise of the oz of battalion and the use of social media to build and recruit white supremacist groups is jeremy kumar of managing editor of covert action magazine and dr...
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Jan 22, 2021
01/21
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. >> harris: "time" magazine's new covering is wasting no time trashing the job president trump did whilerning this image back around on democrats. and this. >> decisions were made were negligent, they put a lot of people at risk. someone lost their life as a result of that. >> whatever the timeline was to get this right, it just got pushed up to tomorrow or today. i think that people are fed up. >> harris: so what do police do? philadelphia police inspector derrick brown going after the bail reforms that put a convict on the street where he shot a man to death just days after going free on a bail he suddenly could produce 10% of because it was so low. they reduced it. the focus is on who is looking out for you when fraternal order of police national vice president joe gamaldi joins me next. with mortgage rates at their lowest in history, it's time to refi. but if you're a veteran homeowner and need cash, here's big news. introducing refiplus from newday usa. it lets you refi at all-time low rates plus you could take out $50,000 or more. money for security today, money for retirement tomo
. >> harris: "time" magazine's new covering is wasting no time trashing the job president trump did whilerning this image back around on democrats. and this. >> decisions were made were negligent, they put a lot of people at risk. someone lost their life as a result of that. >> whatever the timeline was to get this right, it just got pushed up to tomorrow or today. i think that people are fed up. >> harris: so what do police do? philadelphia police inspector...
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like many jews in france she kept it to herself for years not even telling her husband for a long time magazine. made up richard know. i'm a little embarrassed about being famous for my story. yet they're not they're going so many people dying in europe during that time on your book and me because of that period i'm considered a celebrity. gossip. when i think about it i feel ashamed seizure of a free sheet. you know very much else each of these encounters is difficult for luigi toscano he has to maintain an emotional distance as a means of self protection. i think read to me if i'm pretty sure that if it were allowed we would embrace one another through them all and of course there's a sense of powerlessness knowing the people who've been through such horrible suffering by it really gets to. unesco had quarters in paris luigi toscano is exhibition will soon be on display in and around the building. there trash town this is just like the fence of the united nations in new york. research i wish i could set up straight away but unfortunately that's not possible the pictures on here yet i'm feelin
like many jews in france she kept it to herself for years not even telling her husband for a long time magazine. made up richard know. i'm a little embarrassed about being famous for my story. yet they're not they're going so many people dying in europe during that time on your book and me because of that period i'm considered a celebrity. gossip. when i think about it i feel ashamed seizure of a free sheet. you know very much else each of these encounters is difficult for luigi toscano he has...
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Jan 13, 2021
01/21
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we'll speak with timothy snyder, about his new cover story in "the new york times" magazine about trump, the mob and what comes next. then, 4327. that's the record shattering one-day coronavirus death toll in the united states. we'll go to los angeles, which is expected to hit one million covid infections this week to look at how the virus has hit latinx and indigenous communities hardest. >> many people were left without work in industries such as hotels, restaurants, or factories. so many ople in our commuty, because they have the necessity and others because they do not have documents, do not receive aid from local or state or federal government, have no other option but tgo to work in the fields. in many of them do not know the risks. amy: we will speak with odilia romero, a zapotec interpreter who founded indigenous communities in leadership, which helped raise more than $1 million in covid relief to help us endless indigenous -- los angeles indigenous communities. all that and more, coming up. welcome to democracy now!, democracynow.org, the quarantine report. i'm amy goodman. the
we'll speak with timothy snyder, about his new cover story in "the new york times" magazine about trump, the mob and what comes next. then, 4327. that's the record shattering one-day coronavirus death toll in the united states. we'll go to los angeles, which is expected to hit one million covid infections this week to look at how the virus has hit latinx and indigenous communities hardest. >> many people were left without work in industries such as hotels, restaurants, or...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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molly is going in conversation by mark leibowitz, respondent for new york times magazine author of the nfl in dangerous times. welcome molly and mark. >> thanks everyone. >> i guess we are on. i like this. we are here, yes. i'm mark and this is molly overon the other side of the screen . what's great first of all, we have a lot of people here. according to the number on the bottom of the screen we have 428 people. >> probably most of them are russian boss. >> first of all, thank you president and mrs. obama and clinton and carter and bush for coming . everyone in the audience, so anyway thank you for asking me to do this and thanks for being here. this is a really great book and i will tell you that i read the last couple of days and it took me maybe a and a half. it was a pure pleasure to do and i was i knew molly off-line beforeyou can see us i hope . it's both a pleasurable b-tree kind of thing and at the same time it will be one of those historical things where if you want to learn about probably one of the two or three most consequential people of this century so far politically,
molly is going in conversation by mark leibowitz, respondent for new york times magazine author of the nfl in dangerous times. welcome molly and mark. >> thanks everyone. >> i guess we are on. i like this. we are here, yes. i'm mark and this is molly overon the other side of the screen . what's great first of all, we have a lot of people here. according to the number on the bottom of the screen we have 428 people. >> probably most of them are russian boss. >> first of...
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Jan 14, 2021
01/21
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it is available nationwide and "time magazine" calls it one of 2020's best inventions. >>> time for a check ather. here is meteorologist marylee. it's warm. >> watching those temps climb this afternoon, a beautiful day as we look across the bay. you see that sunshine, blue skies as we look to san francisco this hour after starting our day with the patchy dense fog. looking at temps in the 50s and 60s, concord you are 64, 66 livermore, 63 san francisco, mid 60s and upper 50s for santa rosa. highs are well above average into the 60s and low 70s. last time we saw temperatures this warm s back in 2014. it's been a while for sure. that's because of the strong ridge of high pressure building in and sending storms to our north and away from us. taking you hour by hour on futurecast you see that sunshine through the rest of the afternoon stopping the clock at 3:00 p. to tomorrow, starting our day with clouds, patchy fog. through the afternoon, looking at mainly sunny skies with a few passing clouds for your friday and temperatures will be above average for this time of year. we need the rain.
it is available nationwide and "time magazine" calls it one of 2020's best inventions. >>> time for a check ather. here is meteorologist marylee. it's warm. >> watching those temps climb this afternoon, a beautiful day as we look across the bay. you see that sunshine, blue skies as we look to san francisco this hour after starting our day with the patchy dense fog. looking at temps in the 50s and 60s, concord you are 64, 66 livermore, 63 san francisco, mid 60s and upper...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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time magazine national political correspondent discusses the career and house speaker nancy pelosi . and later, republican rep., on how to move the populace movement forward in america. this varsity 30:00 p.m. eastern. enjoy bikini this week and every weekend on "c-span2". >> use our website cspan.org/coronavirus to follow the federal response to the coronavirus upright . what are surgical video anytime and demanded to track the spread with interactive maps. all it cspan.org/coronavirus. >> about today's program. the author, the french equivalent of the pulitzer price. and for her reporting on iraq. she's a journalist in the middle east correspondent. in the author of several books. you ar her first work translated into english. she is a journalist author and analyst who covers middle east international affairs of u.s. foreign policy. she's a non- resident senior fellow at the carnegie international peace and is reported from the financial times. she is the author of the black waves . saudi arabia and wanted and the rivalry that unraveled culture. in the collective memory in the midd
time magazine national political correspondent discusses the career and house speaker nancy pelosi . and later, republican rep., on how to move the populace movement forward in america. this varsity 30:00 p.m. eastern. enjoy bikini this week and every weekend on "c-span2". >> use our website cspan.org/coronavirus to follow the federal response to the coronavirus upright . what are surgical video anytime and demanded to track the spread with interactive maps. all it...
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Jan 21, 2021
01/21
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unity using a quote from his inaugural address this is america's day, this commemorative cover of time magazine using a quote from the inaugural address, quote, without unity there is no peace, and this from the new york post, the new york tabloid, joe in the house, the headline of the newspaper, harris becomes first woman vp, for the partisan website first from the left, this from the huffington post, a new era, biden and harris chip away trump, ready for day 2, this from the daily beast, worse than we imagined, team trump left behind a covid-19 nightmare and from the homepage of breitbart tom hanks leads pride time biden harris inauguration celebrating america telecasts featuring anti-trump celebrities and one american news, their homepage, their lead story, this report on donald trump, considering forming a new patriot party. some of the news headlines you can see this money was we are getting a reaction to all of this especially the inaugural address, president joe biden talked about the need for unity in america. >> to overcome these challenges, resole the secure the soul in the future of
unity using a quote from his inaugural address this is america's day, this commemorative cover of time magazine using a quote from the inaugural address, quote, without unity there is no peace, and this from the new york post, the new york tabloid, joe in the house, the headline of the newspaper, harris becomes first woman vp, for the partisan website first from the left, this from the huffington post, a new era, biden and harris chip away trump, ready for day 2, this from the daily beast,...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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john mccain former spieth grider and aid shares his thought on the life of the late senator prete time magazine national political correspondent discusses the career of house speaker nancy pelosi. later florida a republican representative matt gaetz on how to remove the populist movement forward in america. that starts at 8:30 p.m. eastern. enjoy the tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> use our website c-span.org/coronavirus to follow the federal response of the coronavirus outbreak. watch our searchable video anytime on demand and track the spread with interactive maps all at c-span.org/coronavirus. >> now about today's program he's equivalent of the put repog on iraq and iran, journalist of the middle east correspondent and the author of several books, writing you from tehran was the first work translated into english. she is a journalist, author and analyst to cover some middle east international affairs of u.s. foreign policies. she is a nonresident senior fellow endowment for international peace and from the bdc and financial times. she is the author of black wave, saudi arabia, i
john mccain former spieth grider and aid shares his thought on the life of the late senator prete time magazine national political correspondent discusses the career of house speaker nancy pelosi. later florida a republican representative matt gaetz on how to remove the populist movement forward in america. that starts at 8:30 p.m. eastern. enjoy the tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> use our website c-span.org/coronavirus to follow the federal response of the coronavirus...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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then time magazine national political correspondent molly discusses the career of house speaker nancy pelosi and later florida republican representative matt gaetz on how to move the populist movement forward in america, that start to 8:30 p.m. eastern. enjoy book tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> good afternoon i am president of the american enterprise institute and it's my great pleasure to welcome to this afternoon's conversation with john maggie, he is the cofounder and ceo of whole foods market in the cofounder of the nonprofit conscious capitalism and were here today to talk about new books conscious leadership elevating humanity through business. john i cannot think of a better guess to have on thanksgiving week then you and it's a pleasure to have you, welcome to our discussion this afternoon. >> thank you robert, thank you for robbing me on the show. i loved your book and i recommend the book because i'm almost 18 months into my term as ceo of a.i. and as a been a ceo in my previous businesses, it is was good to be reminded of what makes effective leadership work
then time magazine national political correspondent molly discusses the career of house speaker nancy pelosi and later florida republican representative matt gaetz on how to move the populist movement forward in america, that start to 8:30 p.m. eastern. enjoy book tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> good afternoon i am president of the american enterprise institute and it's my great pleasure to welcome to this afternoon's conversation with john maggie, he is the cofounder and...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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then time magazine national political correspondent discusses a career of house speaker nancy policy. in later footer republican representative matt gates on how to move the populist movement forward in america. that starts at 8:30 p.m. eastern. enjoy book tv this week and every weekend on cspan2. : : : ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> hello i am speaking to you from my home in new york and i am the author of cosmo possible world, deeply truly honored to be participating in an event for the library of congress, and the very first cosmos 40 years ago charles fagan and steven and i celebrated the great library of alexandria in the library of congress we so very much to me because of a democratic idea of the world's knowledge, belonging to all of us it is my great honor to be here and i'm here to talk about possible worlds which is the book i written but also a television series that i had the pleasure of producing, writing and directing with my collaborator. why possible world, why a third cosmo after 40 years. the first cosmos was an effort to give the broadest possible public, a global public and coordinat
then time magazine national political correspondent discusses a career of house speaker nancy policy. in later footer republican representative matt gates on how to move the populist movement forward in america. that starts at 8:30 p.m. eastern. enjoy book tv this week and every weekend on cspan2. : : : ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> hello i am speaking to you from my home in new york and i am the author of cosmo possible world, deeply truly honored to be participating in an event for the library of...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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then "time magazine" national political correspondent volleyball discusses the career of us are nancy posey later the republican representative gates was movement forward in .: 30 p.m. eastern. enjoy tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> good afternoon, i'm john fortier, director of governmental study icons and thank you for joining us in our virtual event here for a reason, the release of a new book, the book is "fight house: rivalries in the white house from trumanto trump" . author, tevi troy, will be joined by him as well as kiron skinner. start by introducing our guests and we are going to talk a little bit and we're looking forward to having you ask questionsas well . the reason i'm excited about this book but also on our guest is a rare thing to be good public service and to the person of action and he's also it's a rare thing to be a scholar and the excellent at the study of something. tevi troy kiron skinner to the table. kiron skinner was someone who works in many places in public service from the congress to departments, department of labor department of hhs but als
then "time magazine" national political correspondent volleyball discusses the career of us are nancy posey later the republican representative gates was movement forward in .: 30 p.m. eastern. enjoy tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> good afternoon, i'm john fortier, director of governmental study icons and thank you for joining us in our virtual event here for a reason, the release of a new book, the book is "fight house: rivalries in the white house from...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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then time magazine national political correspondent molly ball discusses the career of house speaker nancy closely and later republican representative matt gates on how to move the populist movement forward in america. that starts at 8:30 p.m. eastern rid enjoyable tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> you're watching c-span2 your unfiltered view of government. c-span2 was created by america's cable television company and today we are brought to you by these television companies who provide c-span2 viewers as a public service. >> good afternoon everyone i'm president of the american enterprise institute and it is my great pleasure to welcome you to this afternoon's conversation with john mackey. john is the cofounder and ceo of whole foods market and the cofounder of the nonprofit conscious capitalism and he is here today to talk about his new book "conscious leadership" elevating humanity through business. i can't think of a better guess to have on thanks giving week then you and it's a pleasure to have you. welcome to our discussion this afternoon. >> thank you, robert. tha
then time magazine national political correspondent molly ball discusses the career of house speaker nancy closely and later republican representative matt gates on how to move the populist movement forward in america. that starts at 8:30 p.m. eastern rid enjoyable tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> you're watching c-span2 your unfiltered view of government. c-span2 was created by america's cable television company and today we are brought to you by these television companies...
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Jan 22, 2021
01/21
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KQED
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the latest edition of time magazine. joe biden gazing out of the window of a trashed oval office.his day one. russian ate television is fosing on that stark differences between joe biden and donald trump. >> [speaking non-english language] >> this correspondent says biden is not hiding he will drascally change the course the country followed under trump. he says russia doesn't have much to count on. that new administration will continue its policy of containing russia. my colleagues a journalist for bbc monitoring. taking a look at the media in miami for the region and he's been tracking the coverage on this across latin america. >> the interest in the u.s. immigration always was expected to be extreme in latin america. the tone is extraordinary. you see media outlets in chile and others expressing relief at the fact that the transfer of power took place. saying things like a call for unity. democracy has prevailed. warning against extremism. biden's words in his inaugural speech. the tone is very different, quite distinct from the normal coverage of the u.s. and latin america. wh
the latest edition of time magazine. joe biden gazing out of the window of a trashed oval office.his day one. russian ate television is fosing on that stark differences between joe biden and donald trump. >> [speaking non-english language] >> this correspondent says biden is not hiding he will drascally change the course the country followed under trump. he says russia doesn't have much to count on. that new administration will continue its policy of containing russia. my colleagues...
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Jan 1, 2021
01/21
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prize-winning biographer contributing writer for "the new york times" book book review and contributor to time magazine and andrew jackson an american and gospel he chose the chair of the american presidency and nashville he also be joining us with the truth is marching on which is the partnership and now thank you for being here and i will turn it over to you. >> i appreciate it it takes tennessee to bring me to join just to be want to see you all making good choices going forward. was a wonderful moment in the early sixties when president kennedy made a state visit to france and kennedy were so much more popular that he just said i'm the gentle man who escorted jacqueline kennedy to paris i am the guy who was just here to run traffic isabel is one of the most important voices in america and it's an honor to be here so just to some batting practice so just to jump and why is the book not call the race? >> because first of all thank you for being here is an honor to and when it came out in 2010 and it was an experience for me to be here in the matter book was about the migration from african-americans
prize-winning biographer contributing writer for "the new york times" book book review and contributor to time magazine and andrew jackson an american and gospel he chose the chair of the american presidency and nashville he also be joining us with the truth is marching on which is the partnership and now thank you for being here and i will turn it over to you. >> i appreciate it it takes tennessee to bring me to join just to be want to see you all making good choices going...
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Jan 15, 2021
01/21
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her work has appeared in "vanity fair" "new york times" "the wall street journal" "wall street journal" magazine the los angeles review of looks pairs the daily vogue "the news york times" style magazine and many many more. she will be joining conversation by adam gopnik has been writing for "the new yorker" since 19 -- he has written hundreds of essays from personal memoirs reviews and profiles a much fiction humor. as the conversation unfolds i want to remind you that we will be taking questions. if you have any questions for speakers you can submit them via the q&a box at the bottom of your screen and the subject of tonight's discussion is lesley blume's veaux "fallout." if you'd like to learn more about the book or purchase a copy you can do so in the chat. without further ado please welcome lesley blume and adam gopnik. thank you both for being here. looking forward to this conversation in thank you all for being here. >> thank you for hosting and adam thank you for doing this. >> delighted to do it lesley. first of all congratulations on extraordinary book. i will open up the hardcover. th
her work has appeared in "vanity fair" "new york times" "the wall street journal" "wall street journal" magazine the los angeles review of looks pairs the daily vogue "the news york times" style magazine and many many more. she will be joining conversation by adam gopnik has been writing for "the new yorker" since 19 -- he has written hundreds of essays from personal memoirs reviews and profiles a much fiction humor. as the...
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might take much longer studies about here's a computational geneticist at harvard and was voted time magazine's 100 most influential people doctors are very you sequenced ebola samples from patients marking the 1st in-depth use of real time d.n.a. sequencing in a pandemic how's that changed our approach to the corona virus. i mean it is it's a fundamentally different world where we don't know 6 months after an outbreak passes we don't find out what happened we can actually. respond to it right away basically the genome of the virus is the blueprint it's how we track it how we diagnose it and how it evolves over time so we want to get real time snapshots to know what the virus is doing in every moment and to constantly develop countermeasures that target that virus so we would see later we missed the boat i mean you sequenced ebola really on the on. did do we miss out in this case no actually we were very fast in our genome sequencing the original discovery of the virus and that was one of the really sort of sad things about this is such a missed opportunity because we actually looks like we cau
might take much longer studies about here's a computational geneticist at harvard and was voted time magazine's 100 most influential people doctors are very you sequenced ebola samples from patients marking the 1st in-depth use of real time d.n.a. sequencing in a pandemic how's that changed our approach to the corona virus. i mean it is it's a fundamentally different world where we don't know 6 months after an outbreak passes we don't find out what happened we can actually. respond to it right...
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might take much longer studies are various computational geneticist at harvard and was voted time magazine's 100 most influential people doctors of you sequenced ebola samples from patients marking the 1st in-depth use of real time d.n.a. sequencing in a pandemic how's that changed our approach to the corona virus. i mean it is it's a fundamentally different world where we don't know 6 months after an outbreak passes we don't find out what happened we can actually. respond to it right away basically the genome of the virus is the blueprint it's you how we track it how we diagnose it and how it evolves over time so we want to get real time snapshots to know what the virus is doing in every moment and to constantly develop countermeasures that target that virus so we would see later we missed the boat i mean you sequenced ebola really on the on. did do we miss out in this case no actually we were very fast in our genome sequencing the original discovery of the virus that was one of the really sort of sad things about this is such a missed opportunity because we actually looks like we caught th
might take much longer studies are various computational geneticist at harvard and was voted time magazine's 100 most influential people doctors of you sequenced ebola samples from patients marking the 1st in-depth use of real time d.n.a. sequencing in a pandemic how's that changed our approach to the corona virus. i mean it is it's a fundamentally different world where we don't know 6 months after an outbreak passes we don't find out what happened we can actually. respond to it right away...
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Jan 28, 2021
01/21
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that's joseph on the cover of the time magazine. july 10th, 1933. there is a 3000 word article in this magazine covering nazi germany. and what you see even on the cover under the words minister of propaganda girls is say it in your dreams, the jews are to blame. so americans who were picking up magazines like this. these are popular magazines, could have read about the rise of fascism in germany, but what is not hidden here is the fact that antisemitism is essential to nazi ideology. this doesn't mean that americans could have predicted in 1933 that mass murder is to come by the 1940s. but also, it doesn't allow us to say, oh we didn't know. we couldn't let americans of the 1930s off the hook so easily. we want to tell in the exhibition a lot of individual stories. here we are showing american magazines, and a individual story about dorothy thompson. dorothy thompson is the first american journalist expelled from nazi germany in august of 1934. she had interviewed hitler in 1931, before he rose to power, and wrote a book, a popular book in america
that's joseph on the cover of the time magazine. july 10th, 1933. there is a 3000 word article in this magazine covering nazi germany. and what you see even on the cover under the words minister of propaganda girls is say it in your dreams, the jews are to blame. so americans who were picking up magazines like this. these are popular magazines, could have read about the rise of fascism in germany, but what is not hidden here is the fact that antisemitism is essential to nazi ideology. this...
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like many jews in france she kept it to herself for years not even telling her husband for a long time magazine. made up richard know. i'm a little embarrassed about being famous for my story. yet they're not they're growing so many people dying in europe during that time on your book and me because of that period i'm considered a celebrity. garces it. when i think about it i feel ashamed seizure of a free sheet. you know very much else each of these encounters is difficult for luigi toscano he has to maintain an emotional distance as a means of self protection. i just read to me if i'm pretty sure that if it were allowed we would embrace one of them and of course there's a sense of powerlessness knowing the people who've been through such horrible suffering. it really gets to. unesco headquarters in paris luigi toscano is exhibition will soon be on display in and around the building. there trash town b. this is just like the fence of the united nations in new york. research i wish i could set up straightaway but unfortunately that's not possible the pictures on here yet i'm feeling antsy. to d
like many jews in france she kept it to herself for years not even telling her husband for a long time magazine. made up richard know. i'm a little embarrassed about being famous for my story. yet they're not they're growing so many people dying in europe during that time on your book and me because of that period i'm considered a celebrity. garces it. when i think about it i feel ashamed seizure of a free sheet. you know very much else each of these encounters is difficult for luigi toscano he...
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years ago that had big one on the cover and they called it the truth machine i could have been time magazine and yet nobody saw except for viewers the kaiser report of hundreds of thousands around the world have now become pickling millionaires through the show here welcome we're going to take a break and when we come back much more coming your way. and then as that happens the usual. but if you have australian visual they go this route yet there are people. who are. used to me comes around to the notion. that it's an issue. that he did say they don't believe that introduces the chief. economist at it you need to go to church for this new look at a lot of these old that i don't you know pretty chilled or this or moving a choice to be on your boat it will show you such today with a message from the postal order over out of this roof through with don't be fooled the coke were full of can churn you. point of soup they're beautiful i hear them. for you never. you know would be mean. to put so that the new. black cola what their ambitions are their hair for more gas than. just. gould. b.s.t. when
years ago that had big one on the cover and they called it the truth machine i could have been time magazine and yet nobody saw except for viewers the kaiser report of hundreds of thousands around the world have now become pickling millionaires through the show here welcome we're going to take a break and when we come back much more coming your way. and then as that happens the usual. but if you have australian visual they go this route yet there are people. who are. used to me comes around to...
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Jan 1, 2021
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and even when i was running and was on the cover of time magazine. attracting these huge crowds i make gas and i bought to debate and that's okay. you know, i probably can't transmit this through a book. i think it has to be lived but i tried to describe one of the great gifts of getting to be my age now is i'm just not afraid of much. because i've been knocked down a bunch of times. i had addressed myself. i've publicly failed. and people have written entire articles about my life and i've been criticized and ostracized and demonized and you know what? i'm still here. i'm okay. and that's a hard thing to internalize in your 20s or 30s. but to the extent the book can help a young person say okay, it's worth me taking a chance. it's worth me trying hard things. it's okay when i screw this up because that's part of the process. then i think it's worth it for me to be able to share that. >> i wonder if we could have one last final question. the most beautiful moment in the book to me is when you're in oslo, you look out the window at a sea of people hol
and even when i was running and was on the cover of time magazine. attracting these huge crowds i make gas and i bought to debate and that's okay. you know, i probably can't transmit this through a book. i think it has to be lived but i tried to describe one of the great gifts of getting to be my age now is i'm just not afraid of much. because i've been knocked down a bunch of times. i had addressed myself. i've publicly failed. and people have written entire articles about my life and i've...
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Jan 28, 2021
01/21
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and himmler, the architect, on the cover of time magazine in october of 1943. ticle in the interior of the magazine reads that the gestapo have organized a program of destruction without parallel. we show then multiple american magazines are covering this story. we don't have a name for the crime. western churchill famously says a 1941 we are in the presence of a crime without a name. and we wanted to tell a story of the exhibition of rafael, this man who coins the word genocide during the war. he defines genocide as the deliberate destruction of a nation or ethnic group. in 1944, december 1940, for the washington post runs a editorial simply titled genocide, which speaks of the atrocities going on at auschwitz and birkenau as purposeful killings. i think part of americans doubt, and part of their unwillingness to believe what is happening as it is happening is the fact that we don't have a name for the crime, until very late. but genocide is going to join the war as the mass murder of jews is going on. in this animated map, we are showing, we are mapping two th
and himmler, the architect, on the cover of time magazine in october of 1943. ticle in the interior of the magazine reads that the gestapo have organized a program of destruction without parallel. we show then multiple american magazines are covering this story. we don't have a name for the crime. western churchill famously says a 1941 we are in the presence of a crime without a name. and we wanted to tell a story of the exhibition of rafael, this man who coins the word genocide during the war....
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Jan 9, 2021
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ressa was one of four journalists named as "time" magazine's person of the year for another award-winningh." the government's response has been to arrest her that expose her to a maximumil sentence of 63 years in prison. >> colleen was asking if we've had to make adjustments gbased on what's happen with you and... et your s and are we safe, she actually asked you know, "are you guys safe?" and i think that your friends didn't even realize how... how dangerous it is for you. >> it's all relative. >> relative, and funny that you say it that way, because i did tell her you dismiss... >> i's not dismissing it, ust done. we dealt with it, we know what can happen. and i'm okay with it. and... we just...ve >> well,that resignation. you know, that. look, i know you don't want to worry mom and dad, or the siblings ... >> because no one else really needs to know, right? >> that your life is in danger? >> all we need to know is just we're doing our work, that's... it's not that it's anyone's, anyone says, right? 're not different from , except a little bit more (laughs) ugh... this year when, at the
ressa was one of four journalists named as "time" magazine's person of the year for another award-winningh." the government's response has been to arrest her that expose her to a maximumil sentence of 63 years in prison. >> colleen was asking if we've had to make adjustments gbased on what's happen with you and... et your s and are we safe, she actually asked you know, "are you guys safe?" and i think that your friends didn't even realize how... how dangerous it...
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Jan 9, 2021
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president rodrigo dute >> maria ressa, a gh-profile journalist in the philippines, she was named time magazineerson of the year in 2018... >> maria ressa carries the torch of press freedom c inountry held in thrall by a populist president. >> "rappler," since you are a, ke news outlet, then... ri your articles are fe with innuendos and pregnant with falsity. tell me where is our lies, and i'll tell you where are yours. ♪ ♪ (horns honking, vehicles moving in distance) >> okay. fantastic! it's, like, let me focus you firs on what's happening in the entire informati ecosystem. it's dark and light, lett e, let me use thaw, right? they're trying to actively form alternative news. it's dark and light, lett e, letand they've succeeded. trending news portal was a really good distribution. mocha is a really good distribution. that's why, all of a sudden, our society is so polarized, because that's what there doing. this group just amplifies, pounds, but they never share any of the traditional news sites. and the traditional news sites are so blind that they don't even see they're getting killed here, r
president rodrigo dute >> maria ressa, a gh-profile journalist in the philippines, she was named time magazineerson of the year in 2018... >> maria ressa carries the torch of press freedom c inountry held in thrall by a populist president. >> "rappler," since you are a, ke news outlet, then... ri your articles are fe with innuendos and pregnant with falsity. tell me where is our lies, and i'll tell you where are yours. ♪ ♪ (horns honking, vehicles moving in...
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Jan 1, 2021
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he's a contributing writer for the new york times book review and contribute editor of time magazine. he's also a "new york times" bestseller the hope for glory, the american odyssey of george herbert walker bush, thomas jefferson, the art of power, american land, , andrew jacksonn the white house come and american gospel as well as franklin and winston. he holds the chair of american presidency at vanderbilt university in nashville. i would be remiss if i didn't tell you he will also be joining us into an half weeks, wednesday, september 62 talked with book his troops marching on. now i think i will think isabel and jon both for being here and jon i will turn it over to you. >> thank you. appreciate it. the lead to be in atlanta virtually. it takes tennessee and has a bill to bring enlightenment to georgia, so we want to see you all making good choices going forward. there was an old wonderful moment in the early 1960s when president kennedy made a state visit to france, and mrs. kennedy was so much more popular than he was that he simply said, i am the gentleman who escorted jacquel
he's a contributing writer for the new york times book review and contribute editor of time magazine. he's also a "new york times" bestseller the hope for glory, the american odyssey of george herbert walker bush, thomas jefferson, the art of power, american land, , andrew jacksonn the white house come and american gospel as well as franklin and winston. he holds the chair of american presidency at vanderbilt university in nashville. i would be remiss if i didn't tell you he will also...
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party somebody is a computational geneticist at harvard and was voted time magazine's 100 most influential people dr somebody you sequenced ebola samples from patients marking the 1st in-depth use of real time d.n.a. sequencing in a pandemic how's that changed our approach to the coronavirus. i mean it is a fundamentally different world where we don't know 6 months after an outbreak passes we don't find out what happened we can actually. respond to it right away basically the genome of the virus is the blueprint it's you how we track it how we diagnose it and how it evolves over time so we want to get real time snapshots to know what the virus is doing in every moment and it constantly develop countermeasures that target that virus so we would see later we missed the boat i mean you sequenced ebola really early on. did we did we miss out in this case. no actually we were very fast in our genome sequencing the original discovery of the iris and that was one of the really sort of sad things about this is such a missed opportunity because we actually looks like we caught the virus very soon a
party somebody is a computational geneticist at harvard and was voted time magazine's 100 most influential people dr somebody you sequenced ebola samples from patients marking the 1st in-depth use of real time d.n.a. sequencing in a pandemic how's that changed our approach to the coronavirus. i mean it is a fundamentally different world where we don't know 6 months after an outbreak passes we don't find out what happened we can actually. respond to it right away basically the genome of the...
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Jan 15, 2021
01/21
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>> he couldn't have been less from -- he was writing for times magazine and they hated each other, like voluptuous leg, publicly hated each other. reporting for the times in 1939, he was grooming him to be [inaudible] >> sorry to interrupt, but he had a very timely vibe. of that type. [inaudible] >> he was also from -- when you read the dispatch is that he wrote, they are a far cry from what he was writing before for the new yorker later on. >> as somebody who cares only about literary style, i think that's a hugely important question. >> you run with it. >> he had written one hugely significant piece, in historical terms, for the new yorker for that in the pacific, right? >> that's how hersey did come to the new yorker. he actually breaks up with louis because he is far too chauvinistic, patriotically chauvinistic for him and he says thanks but no thanks. he is a freelancer in 1945, but 1944 he had managed somehow to do the story that william shawn at the new yorker had wanted to bring hersey into and he had a story that had been rejected and he brought it to sean and he said come this
>> he couldn't have been less from -- he was writing for times magazine and they hated each other, like voluptuous leg, publicly hated each other. reporting for the times in 1939, he was grooming him to be [inaudible] >> sorry to interrupt, but he had a very timely vibe. of that type. [inaudible] >> he was also from -- when you read the dispatch is that he wrote, they are a far cry from what he was writing before for the new yorker later on. >> as somebody who cares only...
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Jan 12, 2021
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then times magazine national correspondent molly paul talks about the career of house speaker nancy pelosilater, florida republican representative matt gates on how to move the populist movement forward in america. enjoy book tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> good evening everyone and welcome to the bookstore in scottsdale, arizona but i'm barbara and my cohost this evening is a pulitzer prize-winning and distinguished foreign correspondent and columnist for "the washington post" and i
then times magazine national correspondent molly paul talks about the career of house speaker nancy pelosilater, florida republican representative matt gates on how to move the populist movement forward in america. enjoy book tv this week and every weekend on c-span2. >> good evening everyone and welcome to the bookstore in scottsdale, arizona but i'm barbara and my cohost this evening is a pulitzer prize-winning and distinguished foreign correspondent and columnist for "the...
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Jan 26, 2021
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you know, i've been following this stuff for quite a few years now going back to reading "time" magazine and u.s. business world report when i was growing up in michigan. i lived through many predictions of the demise of the republican party, the demise of the democratic party. these parties are old. they've been aroundd a long tim. the republican party is 166-years-old. the democratic party is 188-years-old. they are the oldest of the third oldest political parties of the world with the british conservative party probably being number two, depending on when youou date its founding. and i think as i argued in my recent book how america's political parties change in how they don't, they have a fundamental character. each of them different, which has enabled them both to endure for a long time and to suffer through seemingly terminal crises and repudiation's by the voters and to come back. the republican party since its beginnings and opposition to the act of 1854 has always been a party centered around the core constituency of people thought by them selves and others to not be typical. wh
you know, i've been following this stuff for quite a few years now going back to reading "time" magazine and u.s. business world report when i was growing up in michigan. i lived through many predictions of the demise of the republican party, the demise of the democratic party. these parties are old. they've been aroundd a long tim. the republican party is 166-years-old. the democratic party is 188-years-old. they are the oldest of the third oldest political parties of the world with...
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Jan 2, 2021
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experiencing doubts and confusion making mistakes even when i was running and on the cover of time magazine would make a gaffe and watch a debate i probably cannot transmit this through book but i tried to describe to the girls one of the great gifts to be my age now is i'm just not afraid of much i have been knocked down a bunch of times and have embarrassed myself i have publicly failed and people have written entire articles about my a failings i have been demonized and ostracized and i am still here. i'm okay. and that is a hard thing to internalize in your twenties or thirties but to the extent if i can help a young person it's worth me taking a chance in trying hard it's okay when i screw this up because that is part of the process than i think it's worth it. >> one last final quick questio question. >> the most beautiful moment winning the nobel peace prize and to see if people are holding candles whatever you do won't be enough but try anyway. >> what do those words mean to you now? >> that's what we tell ourselves hopefully every morning when we get up. that isn't unique to politic
experiencing doubts and confusion making mistakes even when i was running and on the cover of time magazine would make a gaffe and watch a debate i probably cannot transmit this through book but i tried to describe to the girls one of the great gifts to be my age now is i'm just not afraid of much i have been knocked down a bunch of times and have embarrassed myself i have publicly failed and people have written entire articles about my a failings i have been demonized and ostracized and i am...
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Jan 16, 2021
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and we have janet reitman, a journalist, contributor to the "new york times magazine" who wrote a major cover story on extremism, failures and ways law enforcement has responded to far right extremism in particular, and who is writing a book on the subject, and we will have a lot from the various reporting that has gone into that. to start us off, i will ask all three to give us a sense of their initial reaction to this event at the capital and what they think happened, how it should be understood, and then we will go into a number of more specific questions before taking your questions and answers, which you can submit via the q&a button at the bottom of your zoom. with that, javed, why don't you take it away. mr. ali: david, thanks for having me, and thanks to new america, peter, the rest of the team here for putting this event together. it's truly an honor to share the virtual stage with arif and janet. really glad to be here. just to kind of kick things off, let me help folks frame how we got to last week. the way i thought about it, and i even talked about this last wednesday, was
and we have janet reitman, a journalist, contributor to the "new york times magazine" who wrote a major cover story on extremism, failures and ways law enforcement has responded to far right extremism in particular, and who is writing a book on the subject, and we will have a lot from the various reporting that has gone into that. to start us off, i will ask all three to give us a sense of their initial reaction to this event at the capital and what they think happened, how it should...
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Jan 21, 2021
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one time he was referred to by "time" magazine as american's historian on the cover.s a high bar we're constantly aware we have exceed. >> the 60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, and 2000s. which presidential speech is the most emotional? are you somebody who said i just have one minute to watch a presidential clip, which one is the most emotional where you think is the most memorable? >> well, i would have to say that in terms of a speech, i would say in deference to mrs. rob, lbj's speech when he -- at the end of the speech right after selma, and he said, and we shall overcome. i was privileged to interview john lewis here in washington and we talked about that moment because he was with dr. king in alabama when they watched that, and they had no idea that the president was going to say that. so, if i was to boil it down to one-minute segment, i would say that. >> okay. so before i got into private equity i thought i should be an actor and i thought this was an easy thing to do but there were no takers. i had to do something else, go to law school and business. being an actor, i
one time he was referred to by "time" magazine as american's historian on the cover.s a high bar we're constantly aware we have exceed. >> the 60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, and 2000s. which presidential speech is the most emotional? are you somebody who said i just have one minute to watch a presidential clip, which one is the most emotional where you think is the most memorable? >> well, i would have to say that in terms of a speech, i would say in deference to mrs. rob, lbj's...
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Jan 18, 2021
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i think we have the all-time record in the history of "time" magazine. >> how it's going?spel reportedly threatened to quit recently if trump made a conspiracy theorist her deputy to ax "axios." >> as you know, i have a running meeting with them. >> it wasn't insurrection, it was a political protest that got completely out of control. whatever you thought happened yesterday, what was racist about it? nothing, of course. there was nothing racist about it. >> how it started, the president's travel ban got predictably messy in airports and the courts. he promised extreme vetting of visitors from several predominantly muslim nations. how it's going, his successor announced he will reverse the ban on day one. extreme vetting underway is of the national guard assigned to washington in the wake of president trump's incitement of violence at the capitol. day one of the trump presidency began with an absurd, unnecessary lie. >> this was the largest audience ever to witness an inauguration, period, both in person and around the globe. >> and that was followed by a lying absurdity. >
i think we have the all-time record in the history of "time" magazine. >> how it's going?spel reportedly threatened to quit recently if trump made a conspiracy theorist her deputy to ax "axios." >> as you know, i have a running meeting with them. >> it wasn't insurrection, it was a political protest that got completely out of control. whatever you thought happened yesterday, what was racist about it? nothing, of course. there was nothing racist about it....
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Jan 30, 2021
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. >> i wanted to make a comment all day long time magazine 1974.the middle of the article there was one sentence that just stood out if and event making individual who determines the course of history the democracy must be perpetually on guard against him. that is what we have was donald trump being most i just wanted to make that comment because ways of yesterday are great call for all and the discussion we are having their t today but it is to ask the question of david talking about generally speaking for noncollege educated white and i want to us in your research what about the noncollege educated white women? >> the majority of the white working for. >> exactly. what will do these and then play? >> in japan more and shall because more democratic by as wide t a margin. and those that are more likely to be in the service and how automation impacts the service for just line a automation with the blue-collar white men. all i can say is the view soon as one - - sense sanctimonious and privilege even though you are barely making meet maybe read the r
. >> i wanted to make a comment all day long time magazine 1974.the middle of the article there was one sentence that just stood out if and event making individual who determines the course of history the democracy must be perpetually on guard against him. that is what we have was donald trump being most i just wanted to make that comment because ways of yesterday are great call for all and the discussion we are having their t today but it is to ask the question of david talking about...
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Jan 2, 2021
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. >> time magazine named its person of the year in the big t event. times editor-in-chief wrote for changing the american story, fo showing that the forces of empathy are greater than their fury, the division for sharing vision of healing. joe biden and kamala harris are persons of the year. they called them the person of the year. they are setting them up as two people and trying to commit depict them as a single person. may be there trying to tell us something, between the criminal investigation of the biden family and the reports about dianne feinstein, she is the oldest sitting member of the senate, there are calls from democrats for her to step down. so perhaps it should not surprise us that the person of the year, might well be just kamala before long. >> you're same because they are calling cognitive situation int question, they are now going to leapfrog to suddenly questionin why biden can't remember that name of. >> i'm looking at all this. in watching all these pieces, the biden family under investigation, questions about cognitive ability. n
. >> time magazine named its person of the year in the big t event. times editor-in-chief wrote for changing the american story, fo showing that the forces of empathy are greater than their fury, the division for sharing vision of healing. joe biden and kamala harris are persons of the year. they called them the person of the year. they are setting them up as two people and trying to commit depict them as a single person. may be there trying to tell us something, between the criminal...
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Jan 21, 2021
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here's the cover of "time" magazine, the new cover out today illustrating the challenge.'s quite a mess you see there. a challenge for the president in the days and weeks ahead as he works to push his agenda through on the backdrop. on one hand he says unity, and the other he wants to do things republicans oppose. julie, that is the challenge. you wrote about this after the inauguration yesterday. joe biden remembers bipartisan ship. he thinks he can go back to that era. you're right, biden's ability to get that legislation passed will significantly shape his nation's ability to tackle the pandemic and his overall stand in washington. he staked much of the promise of presidency to court lawmakers from across the aisle, touting his long working relationship with republican senators and the reputation he cultivated as a dealmaker while serving as president barack obama's number 2. >> he maintains that he can do this. he says that he's had conversations with a lot of republicans privately over the last several weeks and feels like in those conversations there is an openness
here's the cover of "time" magazine, the new cover out today illustrating the challenge.'s quite a mess you see there. a challenge for the president in the days and weeks ahead as he works to push his agenda through on the backdrop. on one hand he says unity, and the other he wants to do things republicans oppose. julie, that is the challenge. you wrote about this after the inauguration yesterday. joe biden remembers bipartisan ship. he thinks he can go back to that era. you're right,...
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Jan 26, 2021
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going back to reading "time magazine" and u.s. world and news report when i was growing up in michigan. and, i lived through many predictions of the demise of the republican party, the demise of the democratic party. these parties are old. they have been around a long time. they have endured. the republican party is 166 years old. the democratic party is 188 years old. they are the oldest and third oldest political parties in the world, with british conservative party probably be a number two, depending on when you date its founding. i think, as i argued in my recent book, they have a fundamental character. each of them differed. which has enabled them to both endure for a long time, to suffer through seemingly terminal crises of repudiation's by the voters. the republican party since its beginnings and oppositions to the nebraska act in 1854 has always been a party centered around a core constituency of people who are thought by themselves and others to be typical americans, but who are not by themselves a majority. when it start
going back to reading "time magazine" and u.s. world and news report when i was growing up in michigan. and, i lived through many predictions of the demise of the republican party, the demise of the democratic party. these parties are old. they have been around a long time. they have endured. the republican party is 166 years old. the democratic party is 188 years old. they are the oldest and third oldest political parties in the world, with british conservative party probably be a...
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Jan 14, 2021
01/21
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, joining us sflou, author of "our now lessons and liberty" and incredible essay in "new york times" magazinencredible abyss about trump, the mob and what is next. so good to have you. first, let's talk about today, in the wake of impeachment, you say the more we learn the less this looks like a coup bound to fail and more it looks like plain luck that all of our legislatures and vice president were not murdered. where is this going? >> well, first of all, to reaffirm that statement, sometimes you just get lucky. what happened on january 6th seems like absolute catastrophe and it is. it's a turning point for the country as a whole and for the republican party in particular. but now that we know more about the timing it's -- we should be thanking our lucky stars or whatever we believed in that there wasn't just a mass murder at this place. where do we go from here? at some many turning points in history this depends on a few people, society, making decisions about what they think is important the republican party can either continue to support the big lie of mr. trump that he wonts election an
, joining us sflou, author of "our now lessons and liberty" and incredible essay in "new york times" magazinencredible abyss about trump, the mob and what is next. so good to have you. first, let's talk about today, in the wake of impeachment, you say the more we learn the less this looks like a coup bound to fail and more it looks like plain luck that all of our legislatures and vice president were not murdered. where is this going? >> well, first of all, to reaffirm...