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May 24, 2012
05/12
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WETA
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tavis: what i think is interesting is that you say, unapologetically, that you play "black music." even to use the black music, to use your term, you have a black drummer, and during the presence of that black drummer, in the south, you guys caught hell for having a black drummer, even though you were playing black music. >> that does not make a lot of sense. tavis: so they love the music, but they do not want you to have a black guy playing in the band. >> that is it. i hate to name places, but, "we will serve you, but we are not going to serve that it be, the big n-word, i would be so embarrassed because she would open the call him that, and i was standing right there. and he would always say, "do not worry about it, man." tavis: you are still playing? you still have gig's after all of these years? >> i love it. tavis: you talk about it at the start of the book, and i started going through the names that you did before he settled on that. you guys were literally called the allman joys? --hope that was not gereg's greg's idea. >> i hated that name. >> as well you should. we went r
tavis: what i think is interesting is that you say, unapologetically, that you play "black music." even to use the black music, to use your term, you have a black drummer, and during the presence of that black drummer, in the south, you guys caught hell for having a black drummer, even though you were playing black music. >> that does not make a lot of sense. tavis: so they love the music, but they do not want you to have a black guy playing in the band. >> that is it. i...
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May 22, 2012
05/12
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LINKTV
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the student was unapologetic and went to paris in 1922 to experience modern painting and sculpture firsthand. he was thunderstruck by the monumentality of the figures in czanne's bathers. "the figures," he said, "appeared to be sliced out of mountain rock." two years later moore graduated and joined the royal college sculpture faculty, a post that gave him three days a week for his own work. and he looked hard at the work of contemporary artists like constantin brancusi, whose radical reduction of the human form would help to define the path of moore's sculpture. he found a kindred spirit in an older contemporary, the american expatriate sculptor jacob epstein, a passionate advocate of truth-to-material and the bold forms of tribal art. moore had his first one-man show in 1928. it won him favorable reviews and an important friend, the influential critic herbert read, who admired moore's direct carving and the organic evolution of his forms. later in 1928, another coup: the architect of the new london transport headquarters selected seven sculptors to decorate the building. one of them was ja
the student was unapologetic and went to paris in 1922 to experience modern painting and sculpture firsthand. he was thunderstruck by the monumentality of the figures in czanne's bathers. "the figures," he said, "appeared to be sliced out of mountain rock." two years later moore graduated and joined the royal college sculpture faculty, a post that gave him three days a week for his own work. and he looked hard at the work of contemporary artists like constantin brancusi,...
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May 26, 2012
05/12
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KRCB
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and he is really unapologetically a face of the past. and one could argue his base is what they call the couch party, those who stayed home during the revolution. mohammed moirs was a name that sort of emerged pretty late in the campaign after the brotherhood's first candidate dropped out. and he by everyone's estimation a rather uncharismatic leader but has the backing of the best organized political machine in egypt, the muslim brother hod which really galvanized the vote on his behalf. and he has promised to bring egypt to the kind of islamic state the brotherhood talked about for years and years, for decades in exilement and recently since the revolution in open areas. >> brown: so the more secular forces that you were talking about earlier who pushed for the revolution to oust mubarak, they're feeling confused, angry. what happened to them? >> they'll till the mistake that they made was they had three revolutionary candidates on the ballot. had they just had one they would have had someone. and so the leading of the three sabbahi go
and he is really unapologetically a face of the past. and one could argue his base is what they call the couch party, those who stayed home during the revolution. mohammed moirs was a name that sort of emerged pretty late in the campaign after the brotherhood's first candidate dropped out. and he by everyone's estimation a rather uncharismatic leader but has the backing of the best organized political machine in egypt, the muslim brother hod which really galvanized the vote on his behalf. and...
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May 21, 2012
05/12
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KQEH
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eye 114
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it's -- i think it's a interesting phenomenon to explore why that music, which contains such an unapologeticbeats and the guitar solos were exciting. there was the, you know, there was something that people could -- had never heard on the radio before, and i think resonated in a way -- so on the one hand, that band became very commercially successful, in part, because, you know, of the radical politics. >> i watched, in getting ready for this interview, i watched some of the old rage against the machine videos. and there's a huge crowd, hands uplifted, almost as if a religious epiphany had come over them. and i'm wondering, is there something hypnotic to this that makes it difficult for a political message to get through? >> the entire political spectrum of opinions was represented in the fan base of rage against the machine. what it -- what happens when you've got music that is that compelling that contains a radical message is sometimes people are drawn to the music because of the aggression of it, because of the beat of it, because of the excellent rhyming and, you know, vocals of zack or
it's -- i think it's a interesting phenomenon to explore why that music, which contains such an unapologeticbeats and the guitar solos were exciting. there was the, you know, there was something that people could -- had never heard on the radio before, and i think resonated in a way -- so on the one hand, that band became very commercially successful, in part, because, you know, of the radical politics. >> i watched, in getting ready for this interview, i watched some of the old rage...
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May 14, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 197
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cheney was unapologetic with the approach and the need to expand the presidency but rumsfeld said the biggest mistake we made not this way but did not work more with congress that allow the courts to be involved which was worse than if we had gotten them on board from the beginning. bit -- bush said the same thing all the briefer. that this great acknowledgement. i disagree with the charles. not his description but those are messy with a lot of lawyers there is extreme name-calling the people asking for documents it demonstrates that the military is extremely effective there are few commanders you can talk to including david petraeus not to say the military is a better off all of the lawyers talking about the cost in the book that on balance they helped to act prudently especially in the world that is entirely networked that constraint turned out to to be important for power. some of their viggo mistakes were harmful to the effort. it is not just their importance but with the ngos what motivates the center for constitutional rights rights, one of the surprising things is our celebrate
cheney was unapologetic with the approach and the need to expand the presidency but rumsfeld said the biggest mistake we made not this way but did not work more with congress that allow the courts to be involved which was worse than if we had gotten them on board from the beginning. bit -- bush said the same thing all the briefer. that this great acknowledgement. i disagree with the charles. not his description but those are messy with a lot of lawyers there is extreme name-calling the people...
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180
May 1, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
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eye 180
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he ras thrust into a position he willingly accepted and is unapologetic for his vociferous defense of laws he has authored and i won't defend or apologies for him, he's more than capable of doing it him, but e stepping into an area where the frost goal refused to lead we have what we have. i must also touch on one last thing, too. the insinuation immigration policy in arizona was being promote ed in return for policy that was "anti-women or anti-gay," that's not just irresponsible, it's false and lose chris. now, my view on immigration in the united states and illegal immigration is formed from several different areas of experience. first it had to do with my role as a staff officer with the 3rd army calvary stationed in texas and active duty soldiers to assist on a reservation which straddles arizona and mexico to help interdict the smuggling of drugs and informed by my role as a line prosecutor in prosecuting felony duis in maricopa county until the passage of a constitutional amendment specifically denying bail to those in the country without lawful authority who committed serious
he ras thrust into a position he willingly accepted and is unapologetic for his vociferous defense of laws he has authored and i won't defend or apologies for him, he's more than capable of doing it him, but e stepping into an area where the frost goal refused to lead we have what we have. i must also touch on one last thing, too. the insinuation immigration policy in arizona was being promote ed in return for policy that was "anti-women or anti-gay," that's not just irresponsible,...
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May 19, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN3
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movement inspired black students on the college campuses across the united states to claim a new unapologetic but politically engaged black and proud identity. it was not only cultivated in historically black colleges in the south, but also predominantly white colleges in the north. the rutgers newark campus was no exception. during the second semester of the 1966-'67 academic year, richard w. roper, one of 20 black students enrolled at the time, was elected president of the naacp campus chapter. roper and his like-minded colleagues wanted social justice and demanded greater democratic access. they began to push for more radicalized direction of the group fueled by national debates, the assassination of dr. king and malcolm x, protests about integration, state power and freedom. a new organization was launched. the black organization of students, or b.o.s., established a powerful narrative of justice, peaceful discontent and equitable opportunity in the history of rutgers university through a bloodless coup. it received support from cross-sections of the rutgers newark communities. similar to
movement inspired black students on the college campuses across the united states to claim a new unapologetic but politically engaged black and proud identity. it was not only cultivated in historically black colleges in the south, but also predominantly white colleges in the north. the rutgers newark campus was no exception. during the second semester of the 1966-'67 academic year, richard w. roper, one of 20 black students enrolled at the time, was elected president of the naacp campus...
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May 13, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 152
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one of the reasons is one of the principles is unapologetic sovereignty. mr. paul has sort of interesting views u.s. sovereignty. they don't align very well believe it or not what the tea party and makes them different from his son, randy paul on that. so it's not going to be the darling of the tea party. we should expect anyone. mr. paul al-aqsa tea party support, but over time he's not going to be the candidate. they are looking for someone else who might be electable. >> host: so as far as you can tell, the tea parties hereto say? >> guest: they will show up in november and will be part of our political scene well beyond 2012. >> host: the book we talk about, elizabeth foley's book is "the tea party: three principles" available wherever you buy your books. >> many of you might not have even been born in 1973 and four when water gate took place but richard nixon won in one of the biggest landslides in the history of the united states which meant most americans who voted in that election voted for him. yet, when stats came out suggesting laws were violated, t
one of the reasons is one of the principles is unapologetic sovereignty. mr. paul has sort of interesting views u.s. sovereignty. they don't align very well believe it or not what the tea party and makes them different from his son, randy paul on that. so it's not going to be the darling of the tea party. we should expect anyone. mr. paul al-aqsa tea party support, but over time he's not going to be the candidate. they are looking for someone else who might be electable. >> host: so as...
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152
May 3, 2012
05/12
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 152
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both candidates come from very different backgrounds, romney is unapologetic for being successful. >> guess what? i made a lot of money. i've been very successful. i'm note going to apologize for that. >> and president obama strongly believes in social justice. >> i want this forever the to be a country that everybody gets a fair shot and everybody is playing by the same set of rules. >> so two completely different believes, two different competing theories, dana, i hate this type of debate because we're taking the debate when we have it. this the debate people play by the rules is wrong, the s it wrong? now one of romney's former colleagues says the 99% benefit from the 1%, not exactly a good message. i want to play for you the sound bite from someone in obama that has a different passage. yes everybody, bill ayers. >> the american empire is in decline and, yes, the united states remains the most powerful weaponized military system the earth has ever known. that is treacherous combination. no politician will say that the empire is declining and that the game is over. it's over. now w
both candidates come from very different backgrounds, romney is unapologetic for being successful. >> guess what? i made a lot of money. i've been very successful. i'm note going to apologize for that. >> and president obama strongly believes in social justice. >> i want this forever the to be a country that everybody gets a fair shot and everybody is playing by the same set of rules. >> so two completely different believes, two different competing theories, dana, i hate...
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229
May 23, 2012
05/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 229
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the student was unapologetic and went to paris in 1922 to experience modern painting and sculpture firsthand. he was thunderstruck by the monumentality of the figures in czanne's baths. "the figures," he said, "appeared to be sliced out of mountain rock." two years later moore graduated and joined the royal college sculpture faculty, a post that gave him three days a week for his own work. and he looked hard at the work of contemporary artists like constantin brancusi, whose radical reduction of the human form would help to define the path of moore's sculpture. he found a kindred spirit in an older contemporary, the american expatriate sculptor jacob epstein, a passionate advocate of truth-to-material and the bold forms of tribal art. moore had his first one-man show in 1928. it won him favorable reviews and an important friend, the influential critic herbert read, who admired moore's direct carving and the organic evolution of his forms. later in 1928, another coup: the architect of the new london transport headquarters selected seven sculptors to decorate the building. one of them was jaco
the student was unapologetic and went to paris in 1922 to experience modern painting and sculpture firsthand. he was thunderstruck by the monumentality of the figures in czanne's baths. "the figures," he said, "appeared to be sliced out of mountain rock." two years later moore graduated and joined the royal college sculpture faculty, a post that gave him three days a week for his own work. and he looked hard at the work of contemporary artists like constantin brancusi, whose...
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544
May 19, 2012
05/12
by
MSNBCW
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eye 544
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god has developed us, and that we love who we are, and we serve the savior to be unashame and unapologetic where we come from and also the god we serve. that is how we root that. >> i want to hold you right there, because we are going to bring in some more voice s ts oe conversation and i want to go back to look after we come back at after the break of some of the sermons of reverend wright that have been frankenbited in the news, and try to delve into it more, but as we go to the break, i want to note that we lost a great voice in donna summer, the first lady of disco. we will fill the show with as much of donna's legacy as we can. so don't go away, and much more on this. ♪ le so let's dance the last dance ♪ ♪ let's dance the last dance ♪ let's dance this last dance tonight ♪ mes with a private island? really? no. it comes with a hat. see, airline credit cards promise flights for 25,000 miles, but... [ man ] there's never any seats for 25,000 miles. frustrating, isn't it? but that won't happen with the capital one venture card. you can book any airline, anytime. hey, i just said that. aft
god has developed us, and that we love who we are, and we serve the savior to be unashame and unapologetic where we come from and also the god we serve. that is how we root that. >> i want to hold you right there, because we are going to bring in some more voice s ts oe conversation and i want to go back to look after we come back at after the break of some of the sermons of reverend wright that have been frankenbited in the news, and try to delve into it more, but as we go to the break,...
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. >> so now she's pretty unapologetic about it, but she's now cashing in on this in another way, right? >> yep, absolutely. she is asking, actually, right now for around $400,000 to pose nude in a magazine. i don't know if they're -- >> is there a particular magazine that's offering that, or it's just an arbitrary number? >> she didn't tell which magazine, but she is actually having an offer or trying to get that amount of money. >> wow. >> she's got a big deal. instead of $800. big deal -- a lot of money. >> that's quite a turn, isn't it? >> okay. fern abandono, thank you so much. good to see you. >> thank you so much. thank you so much. >>> all right, cellulite, nobody wants that one. well, 80%, by the way, of women have it. no fair. the government just signed off on a new treatment that could change everything. dr. sanjay gupta joins me live on the side effects and which it actually works, so don't be too excited just yet. [ dennis ] switch to allstate. their claim service is so good, now it's guaranteed. [ foreman ] so i can trust 'em. unlike randy. dollar for dollar, nobody $ [sir
. >> so now she's pretty unapologetic about it, but she's now cashing in on this in another way, right? >> yep, absolutely. she is asking, actually, right now for around $400,000 to pose nude in a magazine. i don't know if they're -- >> is there a particular magazine that's offering that, or it's just an arbitrary number? >> she didn't tell which magazine, but she is actually having an offer or trying to get that amount of money. >> wow. >> she's got a big...
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May 25, 2012
05/12
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MSNBCW
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. >> he's a chicago player, but sort an unapologetic member of the 1%.aires have too late say in the process and folks who have profiting from the system have an obligation to defend the system. he at his wedding reception was at versailles. >> it was at versailles? >> i'm not kidding. often times when you get the lists you get the name and title and amount they gave. we tried to dig down on each of these guys and figure out how they live. >> this is not the versailles in the poconos? >> vehe owns a 40,000 collectio of wine valued at $12 million. vacation estates in aspen. >> we asked the romney campaign for a response to your article and let me read to you part of what they said. if the obama administration was less concerned about pleasing their wealthy donors appeared more concerned about creating jobs, america would be much better off. people who support mitt romney do so, because they realize the country is on the wrong track and they support his pro-growth pro-jobs agenda. i guess, let that statement stand but the question of influence of the rich
. >> he's a chicago player, but sort an unapologetic member of the 1%.aires have too late say in the process and folks who have profiting from the system have an obligation to defend the system. he at his wedding reception was at versailles. >> it was at versailles? >> i'm not kidding. often times when you get the lists you get the name and title and amount they gave. we tried to dig down on each of these guys and figure out how they live. >> this is not the versailles...
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May 7, 2012
05/12
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MSNBCW
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eye 138
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he was unshackled and unapologetic. >> you know, if i wanted to kill somebody, i'd take this book and beat you to death with it. and i wouldn't feel a thing. >> the interview sparked controversy within nbc. >> we here on the "today" show staff debated among ourselves whether to air his answers. half of our staff said, absolutely not. >> in the end just seven minutes aired on the "today" show. now 20 years later, former fbi profiler candace delong examines the entire interview. >> he certainly has his issues mentally and psychiatrically. but he is not seriously, seriously mentally ill. >> making sense of the mind of manson. >> friday night in los angeles, a movie actress and four of her friends were murdered and the circumstances were lurid. >> the news out of los angeles, august 10th, 1969, was shocking. five people had been brutally murdered. among the dead, roman polanski's wife, sharon tate. she was eight months pregnant. >> she'd been stabbed. repeated stab wounds. one of the victims had a hood placed over his head and the word "pig" was written in blood on the door. >> but the ca
he was unshackled and unapologetic. >> you know, if i wanted to kill somebody, i'd take this book and beat you to death with it. and i wouldn't feel a thing. >> the interview sparked controversy within nbc. >> we here on the "today" show staff debated among ourselves whether to air his answers. half of our staff said, absolutely not. >> in the end just seven minutes aired on the "today" show. now 20 years later, former fbi profiler candace delong...
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May 23, 2012
05/12
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CNNW
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eye 129
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you are an unapologetic defender of free market capitalism. obviously your book takes aim at that, but can you just answer the fundamental question here. mitt romney is trying to say he created jobs, but let's be clear here, his number one goal had nothing to do with creating jobs, right? >> i think that's a cartoonish portrayal of business. people want to pretend the only thing business is doing is working for investors but what's left out of that, the half truth is businesses are working for customers. customers decide what businesses are going to be successful, whether businesses grow or don't grow. in the end if you satisfy the customer, you will end up satisfying the investor. but you can't jump straight to the investor without first working for the customer. >> okay. all of that is true, but still the way you do that is try to come up with something people want. that's your goal. >> absolutely. >> as a private he can quit investor your goal is to do that and make money doing that. >> sure. jobs theoretically flow out of that but it's not
you are an unapologetic defender of free market capitalism. obviously your book takes aim at that, but can you just answer the fundamental question here. mitt romney is trying to say he created jobs, but let's be clear here, his number one goal had nothing to do with creating jobs, right? >> i think that's a cartoonish portrayal of business. people want to pretend the only thing business is doing is working for investors but what's left out of that, the half truth is businesses are...
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126
May 13, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 126
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tammany was unapologetically corrupt. he had a slight error audit. tammany contractors accused of delivering one-tenth of the thousand pounds those bonds is he supposed to deliver to the sanitation department. he's in court under oath. did you do this, did you deliver one-tenth of the opposite and just and he said. >> to do it and try to make >> you -- new york fractured along a track lines. often ran a crack shot over the loss. here he is trying to attack a photographer. his nose was portrayed in cartoons as the size of a hot air balloon. the flip side was a city of fundamental poverty. high and plummet. this is the lodge on bill the streets. making the bed and turning the planks. it literally slept on planks. the cubs often feel gated estate by smoking cigars. yes terry new york was the nation's financial capital, the leading commercial port. 144 piers. thomas and manufacturing, 12,000 factories, our capital, peters. nation's premier residence address. new york city was also the vice capitol of the estate's. it was an open secret. it debut -- durin
tammany was unapologetically corrupt. he had a slight error audit. tammany contractors accused of delivering one-tenth of the thousand pounds those bonds is he supposed to deliver to the sanitation department. he's in court under oath. did you do this, did you deliver one-tenth of the opposite and just and he said. >> to do it and try to make >> you -- new york fractured along a track lines. often ran a crack shot over the loss. here he is trying to attack a photographer. his nose...
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May 9, 2012
05/12
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MSNBCW
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eye 218
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. >> as for vice president joe biden, today he remained unapologetic for saying he's absolutely comfortableality. >> no one's ever doubted i mean what i say. the problem is i sometimes say all that i mean. >> joining me now is ana marie cox, political columnist for "the guardian" and richard so sockaretes, a former adviser to bill clinton. thank you both for joining me. richard, why is this pressure building on the president? there isn't actually any governing action for him to take. it seems to be just a request for an opinion. >> well, the president is the leader of our country and hopefully he can lead the country in a certain direction, and this is an important national conversation we're having. so we with ought to know where he stands. >> ana marie cox, he said in 1996 when he was running for state senate in illinois that he's in favor of marriage equality, actually, and so it's become very clear that this -- what has evolved is the political difficulty of him saying that as a national candidate. that's really what the evolution has been, isn't it? >> well, what's evolved is his statu
. >> as for vice president joe biden, today he remained unapologetic for saying he's absolutely comfortableality. >> no one's ever doubted i mean what i say. the problem is i sometimes say all that i mean. >> joining me now is ana marie cox, political columnist for "the guardian" and richard so sockaretes, a former adviser to bill clinton. thank you both for joining me. richard, why is this pressure building on the president? there isn't actually any governing action...
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256
May 14, 2012
05/12
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WRC
tv
eye 256
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. >> i am unapologetic in my support for equal rights for same-gender couples. >> reporter: coates, who is a graduate of moore house and harvard universities, pastors the baptist church. this congregation of 8,000 is well aware of his views. >> the question is not what do i believe or what does our church or denomination believe about same-sex marriage, but the question is do my neighbors? if they happen to be gay and lesbian, do they deserve equal rights? >> reporter: a few hours after president barack obama endorsed same-sex marriage, there was a conference call with eight african-american pastors from around the country. >> he shared with us how he arrived at this conclusion, and he was very clear to underscore the fact that he understood that there are many different religious and theological views about this, and he was very sensitive to that and realized that people with different theologically with him on this. >> reporter: in the end coates says the majority of the ministers on the call vowed to stand behind the president. coates says he hopes the president's stance on same-sex
. >> i am unapologetic in my support for equal rights for same-gender couples. >> reporter: coates, who is a graduate of moore house and harvard universities, pastors the baptist church. this congregation of 8,000 is well aware of his views. >> the question is not what do i believe or what does our church or denomination believe about same-sex marriage, but the question is do my neighbors? if they happen to be gay and lesbian, do they deserve equal rights? >> reporter: a...
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131
May 20, 2012
05/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 131
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short comment on the cheney and bush and rumsfeld memoirs, and, um, vice president cheney was unapologetic about this unilateral approach and the need to expand the presidency. but amazingly, in my opinion, donald rumsfeld had a whole chapter called the road not taken in which he said the biggest mistake we made was -- he didn't put it this way, but the unilateral approach, we didn't work more with the congress. that led the courts to get suspicious and to get involved, and it ended up putting us in a tighter bond and delegitimating what we were doing much more so than if we had gotten them onboard in the beginning, and president bush in a briefer statement said the same thing in his memoir. those are remarkable, i think, lessons of that approach. so i disagree with charles about, um, not with his description. it is the process and the institutions i describe are very she messy ones, there are a lot of lawyers involved, but not just lawyers. there are a lot of extreme claims and name calling and lots of lawsuits and tons of lawyers and other people asking for documents and looking at thing
short comment on the cheney and bush and rumsfeld memoirs, and, um, vice president cheney was unapologetic about this unilateral approach and the need to expand the presidency. but amazingly, in my opinion, donald rumsfeld had a whole chapter called the road not taken in which he said the biggest mistake we made was -- he didn't put it this way, but the unilateral approach, we didn't work more with the congress. that led the courts to get suspicious and to get involved, and it ended up putting...