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Apr 21, 2018
04/18
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he was crying, he was curled up in a ball.me. we cried for like 20 minutes. and all they wanted was debbie back. >> but the defense knew their case hinged on one thing, lars' state of mind the moment he pulled the trigger. >> i need you to raise your right hand. >> and there was only one person who could tell that to the jury. >>> coming up, a grieving husband or a lying one? >> the love of your life? >> yes. >> the person you know better than anybody else. >> yes, sir. >> yes. >> and you can't tell this jury you pulled that trigger. >> when "dateline" continues. thou hast the patchy beard of a pre-pubescent squire! thy armor was forged by a feeble-fingered peasant woman... your mom! as long as hecklers love to heckle, you can count on geico saving folks money. boring! fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. from potentially deadly heartworm disease.de threat ierywhere and it only takes one mosquito bite to transmit it. that's why you need to protect your dog with heartgard plus. just one real
he was crying, he was curled up in a ball.me. we cried for like 20 minutes. and all they wanted was debbie back. >> but the defense knew their case hinged on one thing, lars' state of mind the moment he pulled the trigger. >> i need you to raise your right hand. >> and there was only one person who could tell that to the jury. >>> coming up, a grieving husband or a lying one? >> the love of your life? >> yes. >> the person you know better than...
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some there was like there was eleven mannequins there there was just everything there was muscles in the right place. there was stomachs and not around it all around there are sleeping. chris wardo on the sea in all different body shapes of us english and there was you know there was there's me i think if i was standing on the bench you know in my colombian british or the bellies in store for this or the germans i was aware of and be honest i could have been the worst and i could've been the worst team in the world if we judged we judge in appearance is the front cover and they were absolutely immaculate oh i think i wanted to be one of a moment just to look small and but then you get on the page the way we started going was it was incredible to show what you're all wrong because you're involved in two goals is to quit the second one. free kick germany have to say are you sure that go but we were someone who may because he saw me as the quickest to get them close than. eight months. of. change the united direction a boy think challenge to different course he went the same locket flat
some there was like there was eleven mannequins there there was just everything there was muscles in the right place. there was stomachs and not around it all around there are sleeping. chris wardo on the sea in all different body shapes of us english and there was you know there was there's me i think if i was standing on the bench you know in my colombian british or the bellies in store for this or the germans i was aware of and be honest i could have been the worst and i could've been the...
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guy i was i was. out the demonstrators in berlin believe the city employee dejan mende was the dutch guy he was almost lynched the was going to have a shorty done. i tried to reach woody at amsterdam airport by asking the airport employees to find him like. went there they got through to him and he called me on your roof and me and then zack to call me i said don't come back i'll come to amsterdam and then we can go elsewhere. i told him what had happened he told me i was exaggerating and nothing would happen and he would come back so he came back that is out of. the eleventh of april nine hundred sixty eight twenty one minutes to find the unemployed painter yells if bomb and shot really don't get three times before he pulled the trigger he shouted you dirty communist swine he was injured during an exchange of fire with the police he was twenty three five years younger than. pearl in exploded. gun shot nobody knew any details the students made to spring a corporation and its anti dutch debating respon
guy i was i was. out the demonstrators in berlin believe the city employee dejan mende was the dutch guy he was almost lynched the was going to have a shorty done. i tried to reach woody at amsterdam airport by asking the airport employees to find him like. went there they got through to him and he called me on your roof and me and then zack to call me i said don't come back i'll come to amsterdam and then we can go elsewhere. i told him what had happened he told me i was exaggerating and...
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that he was he was able to get a wife. on the one hand there was a critic of the borzois capitalist order but on the other he was a devoted family man. met an american woman in a cafe in one thousand nine hundred sixty four and name was gay and she was a christian he could talk to her about religion and theology they became close but dutch his first love was for the revolution and he broke up with her the split didn't last long. he leave it to live with bleach in cloths and american women she studying theology gets the scissors on revolutionary tendencies in the upper stalling age. while rudy's comrades were waxing lyrical about free love he chose a very different style. of. bonnie. yes we wanted to have a party and we invited lots of people. are like now friends people from different working groups from the third world groups. so i know our hawks we composed a kind of wedding speech and it was read out loud as a kind of sermon like there. are prayed in. berlin in the mid sixty's who wrote things are getting serious now fo
that he was he was able to get a wife. on the one hand there was a critic of the borzois capitalist order but on the other he was a devoted family man. met an american woman in a cafe in one thousand nine hundred sixty four and name was gay and she was a christian he could talk to her about religion and theology they became close but dutch his first love was for the revolution and he broke up with her the split didn't last long. he leave it to live with bleach in cloths and american women she...
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Apr 30, 2018
04/18
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it was scary. >> it was instinct that told her something was wrong, said lyndsay.she called 911. >> 911, state your emergency. >> so now, hours and hours later, the detectives confronted chris with lyndsay's story. why, they asked, didn't her story match his. >> so, am i supposed to believe the witness is lying? >> i'm not saying she's lying. it sounds like a truthful kid, whatever. i mean, i don't know. you know, i can't explain what she's saying she saw. >> so now that question we posed as we began, did lyndsay pattison really know what she saw? ♪ with this level of intelligence... it's a supercomputer. with this grade of protection... it's a fortress. and with this standard of luxury... it's an oasis. the 2018 e-class. it's everything you need it to be... and more. lease the e300 for $569 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. mercedes-benz. the best or nothing. with esurance photo claims, you could have money for repairs within a day. wow! that was really fast. so it doesn't have to hurt for long. that's insurance for the modern world. esurance, an allstat
it was scary. >> it was instinct that told her something was wrong, said lyndsay.she called 911. >> 911, state your emergency. >> so now, hours and hours later, the detectives confronted chris with lyndsay's story. why, they asked, didn't her story match his. >> so, am i supposed to believe the witness is lying? >> i'm not saying she's lying. it sounds like a truthful kid, whatever. i mean, i don't know. you know, i can't explain what she's saying she saw. >>...
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Apr 29, 2018
04/18
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this was before the national guard was called. that would put it at two-and-a-half hours ago. >> mr. chairman. this convention do not know that thousands of young people are being eaten in the in the streetsen of chicago. and that reason alone, i request the suspension of the rules for the purpose of adjournment for two weeks at 6:00 p.m. to relocate the convention in another city of the choosing of the democratic national committee and the presidential candidates. host: that is carl albert, the speaker of the house. >> i did not know he got so twisted up. that was interesting to me to see that. host: the election was in august, tied johnson's birthday. you heard that exchange when they said let's move it to mid-september. >> first of all, that is wonderful footage, illustrating how torn apart, not just the whole country was, but the political party was torn apart. outside the convention center, reporters were being beaten up by the mayor's police because they were doing their job. you asked before about cronkite. walter cronkite,
this was before the national guard was called. that would put it at two-and-a-half hours ago. >> mr. chairman. this convention do not know that thousands of young people are being eaten in the in the streetsen of chicago. and that reason alone, i request the suspension of the rules for the purpose of adjournment for two weeks at 6:00 p.m. to relocate the convention in another city of the choosing of the democratic national committee and the presidential candidates. host: that is carl...
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Apr 7, 2018
04/18
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this was different. my son was 21. he had no children. >> the loss of erin, a mother of four was devastating. now the family had to deal with what happened to baby erica. finding out in the most impersonal way. >> i knew she was hurt by the police rushing her down the street that i saw on tv. >> later they learned how badly hurt. she had been shot in the head. >> why in the name of god would somebody do that? >> it was this man's job to find out. >> now, in your experience, how many times have there been babies who are victims. >> there's never been a case i've worked where a baby has been shot. >> a life long local with a once promising pitching career, now retired detective rick arnold now it would be a high profile case. he just didn't know it would be the case of a lifetime. >> this is detective rick arnold. today's date is may 18, 2006. a video camera rolled as detective arnold processed the crime scene. honing in on clues. >> it's a shell casing. the harsh reality of death lay side by side with the every day imag
this was different. my son was 21. he had no children. >> the loss of erin, a mother of four was devastating. now the family had to deal with what happened to baby erica. finding out in the most impersonal way. >> i knew she was hurt by the police rushing her down the street that i saw on tv. >> later they learned how badly hurt. she had been shot in the head. >> why in the name of god would somebody do that? >> it was this man's job to find out. >> now, in...
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Apr 4, 2018
04/18
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he was working at the mgm grand. he was an employee at the hotel and was out of work. he privately developed tvs code delivered his paycheck every month and had the vice president of finance deliver a monthly salary of a. the loyalty worked both ways and it's little known that the middle name is kirk is one of the most famous in the world and his middle name wasn't an accident as a symbol of love and friendship. >> we have >> we have a couple of questions in the audience about the relationship with his family. i think you said you did not interview the family that maybe you can talk about the relationship between him and his kid. you do a great job of covering the path, but maybe some of the basic family items. >> he was married four times, but his second wife they were married for almost 30 years and together they had a daughter and adopted another daughter who grew up as sisters. by all accounts, he was an old-fashioned father, but they went on family trips and in fact he went horseback riding with his daughters in palm springs in las vegas. they went on cruises to a
he was working at the mgm grand. he was an employee at the hotel and was out of work. he privately developed tvs code delivered his paycheck every month and had the vice president of finance deliver a monthly salary of a. the loyalty worked both ways and it's little known that the middle name is kirk is one of the most famous in the world and his middle name wasn't an accident as a symbol of love and friendship. >> we have >> we have a couple of questions in the audience about the...
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Apr 18, 2018
04/18
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it was endless. it was endless. then someone explained to us that the elevator was overworked because it was the only elevator in nicaragua. we looked at one another and we said, we went to war with a country with only one elevator? how could this be? [laughter] my last -- we bought some wonderful sombreros which we took home. my last memory was the evening before louise passed. visiting her in the hospital with anna eshoo. we were blessed to be able to see her one last time. from the first to the last, my run for congress in 1990, when she came to connecticut to campaign for me. and in all the years since. it was my honor and privilege to fight side-by-side with louise slaughter. over her 30-year career, louise fought for peace. she fought for women she fought for health care she fought for women's health she fought for food safety she fought for workers. she fought to end a war. she was fearless and peerless with a passion and a persistence that would make her dad, a coal mine blacksmith, proud. she never took no
it was endless. it was endless. then someone explained to us that the elevator was overworked because it was the only elevator in nicaragua. we looked at one another and we said, we went to war with a country with only one elevator? how could this be? [laughter] my last -- we bought some wonderful sombreros which we took home. my last memory was the evening before louise passed. visiting her in the hospital with anna eshoo. we were blessed to be able to see her one last time. from the first to...
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Apr 21, 2018
04/18
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that was what was intended. the fact that it is hard to remember presidents from the 19th century is what james madison and alexander hamilton and all the framers of the constitution asked what we were aiming for. we want these people to be unmemorable. the stars of the show are going to be members of congress. i decided to look in on the three most noted members of congress during the first half of the 19th century. this was part of my continuing recovery from writing biographies. some of you who have been here ill know that for a while, had this long-term project of writing the history of the united states through biography. i eventually wrote six volumes in this collection. the six volumes begin with the new year and franklin and went to -- began with benjamin franklin, and went to ulysses grant, and abraham lincoln. they linked together to form a history of the united states from the 18th century to the 21st century. i thought this was going to be a great idea. i recommend it to all of you. every house shoul
that was what was intended. the fact that it is hard to remember presidents from the 19th century is what james madison and alexander hamilton and all the framers of the constitution asked what we were aiming for. we want these people to be unmemorable. the stars of the show are going to be members of congress. i decided to look in on the three most noted members of congress during the first half of the 19th century. this was part of my continuing recovery from writing biographies. some of you...
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was the situation he was there while he was in and i thought he was all. he said there's also my right and was there was another passenger seat. and so i look over and i'm like man i was up and he said when he said when he had no vehicle and so i was like man come on i hopped in a car took off right. amount of time to this second murder and went to sleep and i got shots will be up. to all the trouble and i say no i want persons down there are very brave why i asked them why he sued them and he said he knew my name in or a just. one same a petri. dish. that took a toll on me because i'm white and this doesn't tell me i have family i mean this is the type of man that i was raised to respect and so now i said there a shot i get are even more cold if it who was that they would page. it was i guess who was not supposed to that ok he's not somebody that they mean thing or harm anybody in any kind of way. and so on like and then reality said man. everything's gone come back on me too so self-preservation with their self-preservation kicks in i mean people say why
was the situation he was there while he was in and i thought he was all. he said there's also my right and was there was another passenger seat. and so i look over and i'm like man i was up and he said when he said when he had no vehicle and so i was like man come on i hopped in a car took off right. amount of time to this second murder and went to sleep and i got shots will be up. to all the trouble and i say no i want persons down there are very brave why i asked them why he sued them and he...
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Apr 15, 2018
04/18
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and what was happening was a reaction to that.ixon was a politician of the year who understood how to thread that needle. how to position himself as a candidate who is not a radical, not extremist, but who can straddle various elements of the republican party and take the party and the nation forward. ways, ronald reagan's 1966 campaign was a template for richard nixon. he emphasized the issue of law and order. the idea that the country was unraveling, that there were protests ofies, antiwar demonstrations, university unrest, nixon was able to get this theme that the , the quiets americans -- and he was primarily appealing to white, middle-class suburbans or working-class americans. --t we have got a crackdown we have got a crackdown on the supreme court justices who are too lenient, the politicians who have embraced expectations, failed the.common cities . the caller is absolutely right and i would say this about most of the years, we could see 68 as a pivot. a pivot from the post 1945 american order or the country neerged as the
and what was happening was a reaction to that.ixon was a politician of the year who understood how to thread that needle. how to position himself as a candidate who is not a radical, not extremist, but who can straddle various elements of the republican party and take the party and the nation forward. ways, ronald reagan's 1966 campaign was a template for richard nixon. he emphasized the issue of law and order. the idea that the country was unraveling, that there were protests ofies, antiwar...
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Apr 14, 2018
04/18
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i would say one of the reasons vietnam was the disaster he was is because there was no strategy.o political strategy, no clear or militant strategy. in a sense one of the reasons , why vietnam was the disaster it was is because lyndon johnson refused to either accelerate the war effort or withdraw. in the fall of 1967, the war was clearly stalemate. johnson could not decide which way to go. escalate the war to get it over with, or bring them home. politics and policies for the war were a disaster. johnson refused to acknowledge that the war was going badly. he refused to seek an alternative strategy, this middle ground between two much escalation or withdrawal. it ended up the disaster. i reject the argument that this was somehow because liberals thought the boys should come home. liberals thought the war should end because it was not being won. host: challenging a sitting president in his own party. president johnson narrowly defeats eugene mccarthy. that is the key thing to keep in mind. he did not lose the primary. it was basically his margin of victory. guest: he won by four
i would say one of the reasons vietnam was the disaster he was is because there was no strategy.o political strategy, no clear or militant strategy. in a sense one of the reasons , why vietnam was the disaster it was is because lyndon johnson refused to either accelerate the war effort or withdraw. in the fall of 1967, the war was clearly stalemate. johnson could not decide which way to go. escalate the war to get it over with, or bring them home. politics and policies for the war were a...
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Apr 28, 2018
04/18
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i was shocked. i was just so confused.as real. >> in the world of the ivy league, he was the total package, star student, gifted athlete, wildly popular. >> he is one of the nicest guys ever. >> no one could understand how a weekend visit to his parents' house -- >> you have a set?
i was shocked. i was just so confused.as real. >> in the world of the ivy league, he was the total package, star student, gifted athlete, wildly popular. >> he is one of the nicest guys ever. >> no one could understand how a weekend visit to his parents' house -- >> you have a set?
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got them that we down there but if you think it was an extremely unlikely find it was but it was the trolling net that turned up the bracelet. the up way to be then they examined the bracelet and realized it was genuine if it would and had belonged to most your descent takes a very. real stroke of luck was that a fisherman who kept the bracelet instead of throwing it back into the sea. where he once said he might even have caught the bracelet on a previous occasion and thrown out back. but the reason for centex appearance disappearance off the island a clue and the circumstances under which he died remain a mystery schalke guba it was a shock and very painful i mean his disappearance did have a profound impact on what i know but we told ourselves he'd really been in the war and then fifty four years of knowing nothing until that bracelet showed up. but. with no clear evidence from the wreckage the question remains was and one to centex a police shot down over the bay of mar say to just plain malfunction or did the pilot get distracted and make a fatal error. i don't care. so you know
got them that we down there but if you think it was an extremely unlikely find it was but it was the trolling net that turned up the bracelet. the up way to be then they examined the bracelet and realized it was genuine if it would and had belonged to most your descent takes a very. real stroke of luck was that a fisherman who kept the bracelet instead of throwing it back into the sea. where he once said he might even have caught the bracelet on a previous occasion and thrown out back. but the...
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Apr 16, 2018
04/18
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and that then he was gone. it was a little bit of attention. didn't actually interview people like that. they have already set for all of these interviews. on king's desk. i did interview people who were somewhat more unexpected like for instance i interviewed an artist in memphis named dolph smith. his response to the assassination was to go into studio for five days straight and not come out and he grabbed an american flag and he ripped it up.tr he glued it back together on a canvas with all of these different photographs he have taken and he emergeded with a huge hunting collage of a ripped american flag. and how the death of king and had ripped the nation. stories like that but i think people have not heard before. i relied on the interviews that they have already given.ad i would just like to bear witness to the terms of what you are saying is i was a 14-year-old girl in the urban when kingkron ohio was assassinated in my high school life changed as a result.e and people who have been our friends in junior high suddenly things shifted. we
and that then he was gone. it was a little bit of attention. didn't actually interview people like that. they have already set for all of these interviews. on king's desk. i did interview people who were somewhat more unexpected like for instance i interviewed an artist in memphis named dolph smith. his response to the assassination was to go into studio for five days straight and not come out and he grabbed an american flag and he ripped it up.tr he glued it back together on a canvas with all...
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Apr 9, 2018
04/18
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was shot,resident that guard was out getting a drink. was he ever identified and punished and was he ever tied in with the possible conspiracy with booth? walter: i do not know the answer to that. i think he was identified for sure. by the end of the investigation, they are the names of almost everyone who was here in the theater. whether he was punished for by ourtion of duty, standards, the security around lincoln was ridiculously lax. stanton did talk with lincoln about this from time to time. the president said if somebody wants me dead they will kill me. it was not just that night was not security -- it just that night that the security around the president all the it was lax time, you could walk into the white house. written two interesting books which i have read, first about seward and stanton.t the heart of your stanton book, you do not get into today, but that is his service during the lincoln administration and all that he did on recruitment and direction of the army, the organization of the bureaucracy, i think you have great
was shot,resident that guard was out getting a drink. was he ever identified and punished and was he ever tied in with the possible conspiracy with booth? walter: i do not know the answer to that. i think he was identified for sure. by the end of the investigation, they are the names of almost everyone who was here in the theater. whether he was punished for by ourtion of duty, standards, the security around lincoln was ridiculously lax. stanton did talk with lincoln about this from time to...
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Apr 8, 2018
04/18
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it was not just that night that the security around the president was lax, it was lax all the time, you could walk into the white house. over here. >> you've written two interesting books which i have read, first about seward and come i haven't read the john jay book, but we also -- but the book. you have installed. the heart of your stanton book, i haven't read the book on john jay, but i read the one on seward and the one about stanton. the heart of your stanton book, you do not get into today, but that is his service during the lincoln administration and all that he did on recruitment and direction of the army, the organization of the bureaucracy, i think you have great insight in your book about what he did. but your book about seward, referred to him as the indispensable man. or lincoln's indispensable man. it occurs to me, having read both books, that of the two, who could have replaced stanton, who could have done what he did in the way he did to lead lincoln's department of war? walter: midway through the stanton book, as i was thinking about the title, i felt a little like the
it was not just that night that the security around the president was lax, it was lax all the time, you could walk into the white house. over here. >> you've written two interesting books which i have read, first about seward and come i haven't read the john jay book, but we also -- but the book. you have installed. the heart of your stanton book, i haven't read the book on john jay, but i read the one on seward and the one about stanton. the heart of your stanton book, you do not get...
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Apr 30, 2018
04/18
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was partission, which ,f the framework of the podcast i was very genuine of the fact that i was not anert, i was coming to this with real questions about the legacy and life of each of these figures. what i did for every episode was reach out to all of the best historians and biographers and experts i could find, to help tell that story. so i started at toward washington's home, and to book end that, the final episode, after donaldght trump was declared the winner of theelection, i left "washington post" newsroom where i was working on the final episode and i walked out in the middle of the night to the white house to see if a crowd had gathered. it turned out to be something ideal for audio, there were people out there playing bagpipes. hearould hear, sort of that november, m.d. nighttime emptywith -- november, nighttime sound with a bewailing of the bagpipes, and the crowds gathering and gathering, some in support and some nonsupport. that was essentially how the series ended, with another actual journey to a place where history was unfolding in the moment. brian: i know you answered
was partission, which ,f the framework of the podcast i was very genuine of the fact that i was not anert, i was coming to this with real questions about the legacy and life of each of these figures. what i did for every episode was reach out to all of the best historians and biographers and experts i could find, to help tell that story. so i started at toward washington's home, and to book end that, the final episode, after donaldght trump was declared the winner of theelection, i left...
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Apr 30, 2018
04/18
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rockefeller was richer. morgan was more powerful. it carnegie was more philanthropic. publish thisld cartoon in january of this year. -- guest: you could publish this and january of this year. their sing the policies are making the rich people even richer. ironically, mr. buffett in the last couple days announced the giving a reward. so you could put mr. buffett right there where mr. carnegie is. this is one of the most famous puck cartoons ever. top left, this is the senate. a monopoly, for the not mildly -- for the monopoly, by the monopoly. this is a very famous cartoon. specialtatives of interests. the government is of the special-interest, for the special interest. at the time, it was monopolies they were representing. host: september, 1918. explain what we are looking at. guest: the final issue. it is self-evident. look at our political cartoons. -- by then, puck was much more a magazine of art. less political. pictures of pretty women. here, we are still in world war i. this is representative of a wave. this was a final issue. at the time, the magazine was owned
rockefeller was richer. morgan was more powerful. it carnegie was more philanthropic. publish thisld cartoon in january of this year. -- guest: you could publish this and january of this year. their sing the policies are making the rich people even richer. ironically, mr. buffett in the last couple days announced the giving a reward. so you could put mr. buffett right there where mr. carnegie is. this is one of the most famous puck cartoons ever. top left, this is the senate. a monopoly, for...
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he was permitted to draw and when one day the priest said that i was talented i was sent off to be an apprentice in fribourg yes aged just thirteen i was already allowed to learn the draughtsman's trade it is perfectly possible that i owe my talent to a saint blasien monk who was supposedly my grandfather one thing i do know the apprenticeship was no bed of roses for my brother and me we were homesick and had to work very hard indeed. nevertheless i liked fribourg with its cathedral and its narrow cobblestone alleyways a city nine thousand souls strong. it was something new to me. i have my diligence to thank for many things yet the idea that i would actually make it that i be a successful painter and catch on. for a long time i didn't believe it i often doubted myself even when i began studying at the academy of arts in munich. but it was there that i successfully made the leap to oil painting. and am in and. and when baron from the industrialist of saint plays ian recommended me to the court of cards rule i took courage i was delighted to receive a scholarship from the grand duke la
he was permitted to draw and when one day the priest said that i was talented i was sent off to be an apprentice in fribourg yes aged just thirteen i was already allowed to learn the draughtsman's trade it is perfectly possible that i owe my talent to a saint blasien monk who was supposedly my grandfather one thing i do know the apprenticeship was no bed of roses for my brother and me we were homesick and had to work very hard indeed. nevertheless i liked fribourg with its cathedral and its...
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was. the i was honest more young hopeful to get easy i'm a on and i come from dia as a lot of i'm twenty four and have been living in germany for two years later libby i have two brothers who still live in dad as are the shia who's ten and abdelkarim who's nine so it's annoying. since that. night. here in the home of. one of the reasons my brothers joined islamic state is that they were home alone with no one to supervise them. and that. kind of. pollution will confuse your computers in addition confiscated all the televisions that created a vacuum. with no access to t.v.'s or satellite dishes kids started watching i asked propaganda. if israel. plus it all the schools were closed nothing to us made us more look at each other. on how to look along in the north in the shoe and show i suppose i sent them money to buy a laptop so by sheer could play video games and my mother took this video from the lobby can be told the local list doesn't feel doable how you feel. and she wanted to show. me
was. the i was honest more young hopeful to get easy i'm a on and i come from dia as a lot of i'm twenty four and have been living in germany for two years later libby i have two brothers who still live in dad as are the shia who's ten and abdelkarim who's nine so it's annoying. since that. night. here in the home of. one of the reasons my brothers joined islamic state is that they were home alone with no one to supervise them. and that. kind of. pollution will confuse your computers in...
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Apr 4, 2018
04/18
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but it was also -- there was a lot of debate. and there was a lot of controversy. in a way, when we think about the civil rights movement and dr. martin luther king jr. as this significant figure, this iconic figure, king is really a political mobilizer. and there are a number of different movements. so there are movements within the movement. so by 1967, we're seeing black power activists who are talking about community control all across the united states. they're talking about radical, social, political, cultural self-determination. we've got groups like the student nonviolent coordinating committee which professor cleaver was also a part of, who are talking about anti-war activism and anti-imperialism. we have the national welfare rights organization that's talking about poverty. in that way, by 1968, king is talking about a poor people's campaign and an antipoverty campaign, at the same time that you've got young black political radicals who are talking about everything from, you know, educational activism and the creation he have black student unions, to anti
but it was also -- there was a lot of debate. and there was a lot of controversy. in a way, when we think about the civil rights movement and dr. martin luther king jr. as this significant figure, this iconic figure, king is really a political mobilizer. and there are a number of different movements. so there are movements within the movement. so by 1967, we're seeing black power activists who are talking about community control all across the united states. they're talking about radical,...
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Apr 20, 2018
04/18
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this was on a tuesday, one week after comey was fired. later that day, the fbi got the first request from a congressional republican to hand those memos over to the oval office. congressman chaffetz wrote that same day and insyisted the bureu hand over the memoranda, notes, summaries and recordings referring to communications between comey and the president. the very next day, the day after the existence of those memos was revealed and congress demanded to see them, deputy attorney rod rosenstein appointed robert mueller to be a special counsel to take over the russia investigation. and if comey's firing was directly connected to the russia investigation, which trump himself had said it was, then comey's firing would presumably fall under the special counsel's active open investigation. so the fbi said no. the fbi told congress no, we cannot turn over james comey's memos to you because they are evidence in an ongoing investigation and we don't turn over evidence in an ongoing investigation to anyone. that standoff between the fbi and cong
this was on a tuesday, one week after comey was fired. later that day, the fbi got the first request from a congressional republican to hand those memos over to the oval office. congressman chaffetz wrote that same day and insyisted the bureu hand over the memoranda, notes, summaries and recordings referring to communications between comey and the president. the very next day, the day after the existence of those memos was revealed and congress demanded to see them, deputy attorney rod...
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extremist it was fanatical it was stupid. they didn't want to fight under hussein the leaders and hussein the gunman. the mufti eliminated those who opposed his policy of violence. in the winter of one hundred forty seven arab militias besieged the jewish part of jerusalem's old city the population was cut off from the outside world. the situation seemed hopeless those trapped in the city were supplied with food that was smuggled in but they were cold and hungry nonetheless. they enjoy the bakery also made deliveries not only of bread. commonness again and with us we smuggled guns and some of our sacks of bread. i had a british friend who turned a blind eye. it was important for us to provide the population with bread but we also took the opportunity to help them out a little with guns and. the know it loads of. the jewish defenses were proving ineffective money and the tax intensifies. the problem was that the by april april and early me one thousand nine hundred forty eight the jewish side and it wasn't winning the war at b
extremist it was fanatical it was stupid. they didn't want to fight under hussein the leaders and hussein the gunman. the mufti eliminated those who opposed his policy of violence. in the winter of one hundred forty seven arab militias besieged the jewish part of jerusalem's old city the population was cut off from the outside world. the situation seemed hopeless those trapped in the city were supplied with food that was smuggled in but they were cold and hungry nonetheless. they enjoy the...
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Apr 26, 2018
04/18
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it was work product. >> no. it was not. it was my personal aid to memoir. >> bret: meeting president. >> i carried two copies of it. one to keep in my personal safe at home and i left another one at the fbi so the bureau could always have access to it. i always thought of it as mine like a diary. >> bret: who else did you give, leak, whatever you want to call it. >> use is what i prefer. >> bret: the memos to. >> i gave the memos to my legal team after i gave them to dan richman after i gave them to the media. i'm sorry, gave four memos to my legal team. >> bret: which included patrick fitzgerald. he was a legal team at that time. >> correct, sure. david kelly and dan richman. >> bret: you said in the memos i said i don't do sneaky things, i don't leak. i don't do weasel moves. we can argue what a leak is but that's a leak, isn't it? >> it's not. >> bret: okay. here's what you told chuck grassley about leaking. >> director comey, have you ever been an anonymous source in news reports about matters relating to the trump inve
it was work product. >> no. it was not. it was my personal aid to memoir. >> bret: meeting president. >> i carried two copies of it. one to keep in my personal safe at home and i left another one at the fbi so the bureau could always have access to it. i always thought of it as mine like a diary. >> bret: who else did you give, leak, whatever you want to call it. >> use is what i prefer. >> bret: the memos to. >> i gave the memos to my legal team after...
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Apr 2, 2018
04/18
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CNNW
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he was a source of advice, strategy, and he was a sounding board. >> he was an essential support for kennedy, who spoke to him a lot on the phone. who jack could call at 2:00 in the morning. it was really all was there for him. >> in december of 1961 all of that disappeared. >> joe is the at the family vacation home in palm beach. >> joe kennedy goes out to play golf. he loved nothing better than to play golf. he was pretty good. especially when money was on the line. >> and on the 8th hole, he began to feel faint. he said, please take me home. >> he goes back to the house. jackie is there. he said, i just need to rest. >> don't call any doctors. those are his last words. he then went into his room and he suffered a massive stroke. >> joseph is taken to the hospital. immediately he's put on the critical list. he's in real bad shape. he's given last rights because he might pass away. for jackie to be the one to tell jack that this has happened, it's devastating. >> jack, bobby and their sister jeanne fly from washington to be at their father's side. >> they all rush eed be with hi in
he was a source of advice, strategy, and he was a sounding board. >> he was an essential support for kennedy, who spoke to him a lot on the phone. who jack could call at 2:00 in the morning. it was really all was there for him. >> in december of 1961 all of that disappeared. >> joe is the at the family vacation home in palm beach. >> joe kennedy goes out to play golf. he loved nothing better than to play golf. he was pretty good. especially when money was on the line....
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Apr 15, 2018
04/18
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CSPAN3
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that was what he was about. how proud he would be of his children, his grandchildren, and now great grandchildren. how proud he would be of how they have carried that legacy in their own individual, personal way. [applause] he warned that our right to moral leadership on this planet is at stake when he was running. that rings so true now. i had the privilege of serving with joseph kennedy ii. i had the privilege of serving with joseph kennedy iii. i say privilege because he has -- he reminds me so much of his grandfather. it's just a funny thing. most members were probably not old enough to have had any interaction or even been in the same room or something as a volunteer student with robert kennedy. but he reminds me so much of him. but the whole family, whether it's kerry with the human rights committee -- foundation or kathleen running in maryland. kathleen, we take great pride of her in maryland. but the whole family, every one of them, in so many ways that you know, all of you know, are about values, about
that was what he was about. how proud he would be of his children, his grandchildren, and now great grandchildren. how proud he would be of how they have carried that legacy in their own individual, personal way. [applause] he warned that our right to moral leadership on this planet is at stake when he was running. that rings so true now. i had the privilege of serving with joseph kennedy ii. i had the privilege of serving with joseph kennedy iii. i say privilege because he has -- he reminds me...
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was. only addressed eve through her spouse adam and the name of joe was not mentioned once although she was instrumental in the founding of islam. because she was the one who directed her husband onto the path that. had him to become the prophet of islam why didn't god address women and if he did why was it always through men. why should a man's share be double that of a woman's. the only he has said that the many men in the middle east believe a woman status is lower than a man's in reality this goes against god's word and against all sacred books. least the queen of sheba is a well known figure in the qur'an that moira will these she is the most prominent example that she was in charge she was a ruler and advised the man a little norm koger theo you are so in fact gone on and women in the qur'an in the bible in the torah and in all sacred books see it feel for how can always in the middle east claim today that a woman's body is shameful a law that a woman's voice is to believe said to be
was. only addressed eve through her spouse adam and the name of joe was not mentioned once although she was instrumental in the founding of islam. because she was the one who directed her husband onto the path that. had him to become the prophet of islam why didn't god address women and if he did why was it always through men. why should a man's share be double that of a woman's. the only he has said that the many men in the middle east believe a woman status is lower than a man's in reality...
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Apr 6, 2018
04/18
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bill was young. this was also communism. you know, this was a threat much greater than any that we face now. and so, you know, he saw this man engaged in calling it out and he thought, well, this must be a good thing. so -- but i think there has to be a similar process of disengagement from the person who occupied the white house. maybe it will -- maybe it will make the conservative movement go a little cold turkey on the task of always finding the right president. you know, that occupies so much of our thoughts. and obviously it's politically important, it's psychologically important because, you know, we don't have a king, the president is in that role that americans project a lot on who the president is, they want to identify with him, all the rest of that. and maybe we've gone a little too overboard with that and, you know, certainly our relationship with ronald reagan was very close and all to the good. but, you know, we kept looking for the next reagan. well, he's not going to happen. or maybe we'll be lucky enough to
bill was young. this was also communism. you know, this was a threat much greater than any that we face now. and so, you know, he saw this man engaged in calling it out and he thought, well, this must be a good thing. so -- but i think there has to be a similar process of disengagement from the person who occupied the white house. maybe it will -- maybe it will make the conservative movement go a little cold turkey on the task of always finding the right president. you know, that occupies so...
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Apr 28, 2018
04/18
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it was costly. was it worth it? i do not know. >> the bombing offensive with the british at night and the americans at day is one of the examples of the air force and air power overselling its ability to win a war on its own. that is where the campaign came from. it was sold to policymakers. it is cheap and surgical and you will not have to put boots on the ground and you will kill whoever the target happens to be. it was not quick. it was not easy. it was bloody. it turned into just another form of attrition. our friend don miller who wrote that book says this phrase all the time -- it was a pilot killing contest and who could kill each other's pilots? one way you could be a air force was by bombing places where those aircraft were produced, factories in big cities. what about the workers' quarters? you could bomb those and the fire department which puts out the fires. one thing leads to the other but when you're in a war of attrition, you will grab for almost any straw and by the end of the war, the allies had all
it was costly. was it worth it? i do not know. >> the bombing offensive with the british at night and the americans at day is one of the examples of the air force and air power overselling its ability to win a war on its own. that is where the campaign came from. it was sold to policymakers. it is cheap and surgical and you will not have to put boots on the ground and you will kill whoever the target happens to be. it was not quick. it was not easy. it was bloody. it turned into just...
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Apr 21, 2018
04/18
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her wit was on display everywhere she was. i remember being with them last summer on the porch, she a lunch outside, the waves were coming in. the maine coast, the sun reflecting on the waves. family was always around. that is when she was happiest. i will with -- i will miss the advice she offered. as we mourn the loss of this authentic and admired american, we should all find comfort in remembering the way she lived. and the incredible legacy she leaves. she never ran for political office herself. in a way, she represented all of us. she represented the best in all of us. that is one reason she was so popular. she showed us how to handle the spotlight. and responsibility. with thee, dignity, incredible way she was able to bring tranquility wherever she was. no wife, no mother, no grandmother was ever devoted to her family. her unconditional love for her children, including the 43rd president of the united states, with whom she had a great relationship, true partnership with george h.w. bush and service to the country all the
her wit was on display everywhere she was. i remember being with them last summer on the porch, she a lunch outside, the waves were coming in. the maine coast, the sun reflecting on the waves. family was always around. that is when she was happiest. i will with -- i will miss the advice she offered. as we mourn the loss of this authentic and admired american, we should all find comfort in remembering the way she lived. and the incredible legacy she leaves. she never ran for political office...
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Apr 29, 2018
04/18
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BBCNEWS
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but it was late. -- i thought. she was getting to grips with it. it was running on first days and days. it is a very accident prone department. i was a civil servant for about 15 years in the economic department, obviously the treasury, and the idea you had a home secretary who had a fair grip oi'i home secretary who had a fair grip on what the department was, you said it was one of the great offices of state, someone said it was one of the great offices of state. it is one of the great offices of state and you expect to have a home secretary who has a reasonable grip oi'i secretary who has a reasonable grip on what the department is doing. looking back in history, home secretaries have come a cropper over this, but similarterrain. secretaries have come a cropper over this, but similar terrain. charles clarke lost his job over the deportation of criminals. very similar problems. theresa may is actually one of the unique, sorry, you cannot be one of the unique, one of the unusual home secretaries in not coming a cropper and was home secretary for a
but it was late. -- i thought. she was getting to grips with it. it was running on first days and days. it is a very accident prone department. i was a civil servant for about 15 years in the economic department, obviously the treasury, and the idea you had a home secretary who had a fair grip oi'i home secretary who had a fair grip on what the department was, you said it was one of the great offices of state, someone said it was one of the great offices of state. it is one of the great offices...
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Apr 2, 2018
04/18
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when was this published and how big was it? and what was it -- what was in it? >> 1887 comments it's part of an interesting -- i noticed genre of anecdote book. i know dr. robertson has a huge library and he probably knows more about this type of publication. sometimes they pulled from newspapers from the civil war years through i don't know where they get some of the stories, but they are very short. less than a page, halfpage or less. just exactly what it says, anecdotes and incidents of the rebellion. sometime the latter part of the 19 century, people wanted a little bit of humor and fun about this war. it is still a piece with the memorialization effort.
when was this published and how big was it? and what was it -- what was in it? >> 1887 comments it's part of an interesting -- i noticed genre of anecdote book. i know dr. robertson has a huge library and he probably knows more about this type of publication. sometimes they pulled from newspapers from the civil war years through i don't know where they get some of the stories, but they are very short. less than a page, halfpage or less. just exactly what it says, anecdotes and incidents...
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Apr 7, 2018
04/18
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he was murdered as soon as he was making his speech. so the right-wing repression that was coming, they made it clear the politics of robert kennedy, social justice, antiwar, were being repudiated. and that kind of set the tone for a very radical uprising across the country. host: we set the tone for this discussion with that news report of the death of martin luther king jr. 50 years ago this week. describe your memory of learning about the death of martin luther king jr.. remember, i was in oakland at the time. i was living in california. the black panther party headquarters was in oakland. i remember how stunned and angry black people around the country were. washington, d.c. was set on fire. there were tons of uprisings, riots, protests, the country seemed to be in a state of chaos. what was intriguing is that clearly there was an instruction to the police and cities to stand down because police were not confronting these uprisings. you saw a huge explosion of anger, frustration, and violence in the wake of the assassination of mart
he was murdered as soon as he was making his speech. so the right-wing repression that was coming, they made it clear the politics of robert kennedy, social justice, antiwar, were being repudiated. and that kind of set the tone for a very radical uprising across the country. host: we set the tone for this discussion with that news report of the death of martin luther king jr. 50 years ago this week. describe your memory of learning about the death of martin luther king jr.. remember, i was in...
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Apr 21, 2018
04/18
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bush, she was loving. >> he was superman.till is. >> and devoted. >> you can criticize me, but don't criticize my husband, or you're dead. >> fiercely protective of her husband, but in a way that avoided the pitfalls of some other first ladies who have seemed overly intrusive. >> reporter: his not-so-secret secret weapon. >> she had a foot with the family and a foot in his career. this idea that she was not politically involved is not true. she was there. >> barbara was someone who could tell george what she thought. and she would. just like she could tell everybody what she thought. and she would. >> i'm not sure that my grandfather would have obtained nearly as many accolades as he did, but for my grandmother. >> reporter: critical political partner? >> an essential political partner. >> reporter: together for more than 70 years, the bushes were the longest married couple in presidential history. a love story documented in hundreds of letters between the two. >> i love you, precious, with all my heart. and to know that you
bush, she was loving. >> he was superman.till is. >> and devoted. >> you can criticize me, but don't criticize my husband, or you're dead. >> fiercely protective of her husband, but in a way that avoided the pitfalls of some other first ladies who have seemed overly intrusive. >> reporter: his not-so-secret secret weapon. >> she had a foot with the family and a foot in his career. this idea that she was not politically involved is not true. she was there....
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is five years there was a lot going on here and it was cool to be part of it the backdrop was cool toopecially at night when the cathedral was lit up that was special and it makes you want to stay out there a while longer and skate to my own new fans of some of the clan. the debate went on for twenty years finally the skateboarders had to move elsewhere some of them a still upset about that decision. those are the kinds of it's purely subjective some people thought that we were violating the integrity of the cathedral but how can you damage cathedrals reputations in this the world so how can you do that by skateboarding the matheson and him here. so what is acceptable and what isn't outside cologne cathedral the debate about that is probably as old as the building itself and it continues today fuelled by the immediate proximity of the city's main railway station. to pick i know no other european city has a cathedral right next to a railway station you almost stumble into the cathedral when you leave the station the cathedral's north door used to be open and on a rainy morning commuters
is five years there was a lot going on here and it was cool to be part of it the backdrop was cool toopecially at night when the cathedral was lit up that was special and it makes you want to stay out there a while longer and skate to my own new fans of some of the clan. the debate went on for twenty years finally the skateboarders had to move elsewhere some of them a still upset about that decision. those are the kinds of it's purely subjective some people thought that we were violating the...
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Apr 23, 2018
04/18
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it was, d.c. was a place that was rich with political energy.as -- and the invasion of iraq happened. was looking at it. it was after 9/11. george w was making the connection to iraq. i was like what is the connection here. i don't see where the docs go here. -- with the dots go here. i don't understand why we are going to war here. i don't get it. friendser brother had who were enlisted. i remember that going off to war . i remember how much it hit me. ed is going to war. he's terrified. all these young people are being sent over to war for something that doesn't even need to happen. that is when i started speaking out against the war. i'm here at d.c. and speaking at different rallies. happenede things that was that -- his son was at one of the rallies. upcommended me for standing and speaking my mind. a lot of the experience that i college high school to was not as much of the resistance from the management perspective of my speaking up. they were very supportive. of my right to be able to speak out. that is the thing that is up for debate ri
it was, d.c. was a place that was rich with political energy.as -- and the invasion of iraq happened. was looking at it. it was after 9/11. george w was making the connection to iraq. i was like what is the connection here. i don't see where the docs go here. -- with the dots go here. i don't understand why we are going to war here. i don't get it. friendser brother had who were enlisted. i remember that going off to war . i remember how much it hit me. ed is going to war. he's terrified. all...
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Apr 23, 2018
04/18
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when he was eight, he was viewed as a 12-year-old.ad to have a talk with him much earlier than i probably should have had and i had to expose him to the way society would see him and view him a lot earlier than i wanted to. brian: what did you tell him? etan: a lot. i remember to this day. it was around the trayvon martin murder. he was six years old. i had to tell him there were people who would view you as a criminal. he is six years old. he heard about trayvon martin. the news was on and he was listening to it. he was asking what happened and i had to tell him. you are not always going to be this cute, little kid with dreadlocks like your dad that is tall for his age and a smile. that is not how people will look at you. they will look at you as a threat. there are things i need to teach you now. for instance, i told him, when he gets older, when he goes to a store, he has to always ask for a receipt so no one can accuse you of stealing. those little things that black parents teach black children. i just did not think i would have t
when he was eight, he was viewed as a 12-year-old.ad to have a talk with him much earlier than i probably should have had and i had to expose him to the way society would see him and view him a lot earlier than i wanted to. brian: what did you tell him? etan: a lot. i remember to this day. it was around the trayvon martin murder. he was six years old. i had to tell him there were people who would view you as a criminal. he is six years old. he heard about trayvon martin. the news was on and he...
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was the best place in the world. i. think. i. was. i. thought it was i.come to alex salmond who having completed our chile tea on the future of islands and europe we now turn our sights on the two other celtic nations in these islands scotland and wales in the last half century scottish politics has been transformed starting with the victory of that very special lady when a friend margaret ewing and i by legs. and how milton and one nine hundred sixty seven from having no parliament and little distinctive scottish voice the united kingdom scotland has moved democratically to the very brink of independence i was the special guest this week has been active in politics right that period and not from only one vantage point but from that of three different political parties none s.n.p. member of the scottish parliament alex's interview with alex new demonstrates that he's lost none of his ability to rebel from the party line as he charged three forward for scotland but first let's have a look at your tweets your messages and your emails gillie says alex i'm un
was the best place in the world. i. think. i. was. i. thought it was i.come to alex salmond who having completed our chile tea on the future of islands and europe we now turn our sights on the two other celtic nations in these islands scotland and wales in the last half century scottish politics has been transformed starting with the victory of that very special lady when a friend margaret ewing and i by legs. and how milton and one nine hundred sixty seven from having no parliament and little...
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Apr 15, 2018
04/18
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>> it was tested. >> and do you now believe that teresa was shot in that garage?yes. >> one strange thing, though, when they searched the garage for blood, they never found a drop. >> how could you clean up all that blood? >> well, he did it to the best of his ability, i guess. bleach, paint thinner. >> teresa's friend kim said when she heard the details about teresa's final moments, she was heart broken. >> i remember crying and just hoping she was who she was and fought. because she was a very strong person. >> ken krats charged brendan dassey as a co-conspirator in her murder. >> i intend to hold each of these defendants accountable for the rape, the torture, and the murder of teresa halbach. >> but not so fast. dassey recanted his statements. just before avery's trial, the judge dismissed the rape charge against hi and didn't allow any of those allegations about avery's treatment of women, saying they didn't prove anything about teresa's murder. and avery was never charged with assaulting his ex-fiancee or with raping the teen. to this day, he denies all the a
>> it was tested. >> and do you now believe that teresa was shot in that garage?yes. >> one strange thing, though, when they searched the garage for blood, they never found a drop. >> how could you clean up all that blood? >> well, he did it to the best of his ability, i guess. bleach, paint thinner. >> teresa's friend kim said when she heard the details about teresa's final moments, she was heart broken. >> i remember crying and just hoping she was who...
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Apr 7, 2018
04/18
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it was fearful when i was young. i remember the atlanta temple was bombed. that was a first political event i remember. there were swastikas and anti-black slogans in the ruins of the atlanta temple in 1957, i believe. the civil rights era was scary. it was scary to white people, it scary to black people. if all of my thousands of interviews mean anything, don't believe everybody who says they were in the heart of the civil rights movement. most black people weren't either. it was a frightening time. i was amazed, but it started raising deep issues even for me , as a child developing a sense of sarcasm about what was going on while i was chasing girls and playing football. i remember some of my friends who were hostile across the racial lines were the ones that would sneak off to the stadium to hear what we call sanctified ray charles. we would go downtown to hear jackie wilson and mary wells and sam cooke and there was something about the magic and the emotion of crossover black music in that era that deepened the mystery of where is this race thing coming
it was fearful when i was young. i remember the atlanta temple was bombed. that was a first political event i remember. there were swastikas and anti-black slogans in the ruins of the atlanta temple in 1957, i believe. the civil rights era was scary. it was scary to white people, it scary to black people. if all of my thousands of interviews mean anything, don't believe everybody who says they were in the heart of the civil rights movement. most black people weren't either. it was a frightening...
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Apr 14, 2018
04/18
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CSPAN2
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was the man. >> jeb was the man. that's largerly mythological. george w. bush ran a very good campaign for congress in west texas in 1978 when he was 32 years old. >> a campaign -- >> the -- this is in a heavily democratic district. george w. bush wasn't expected to win the republican nomination,let alone run a pretty good racing in that district. ken hans was the favorite. and yet he came within a couple of percentage points of winning that race. largely because ken hans exploded him being a carpet bagger, ostensibly a carpet bagger. tells a joke but a limousine that glide up to a ranch ins we e west texas with connecticut license plates and the window goes down and the gentleman in the car asks the rancher where a certain ranch was ask the rancher says go up the road, take a right past the first cattle gord and it's your first level. the guy in the limousine says, so, what color uniform will that cattle guard be wearing? and he said -- when it drove away,ry below damned if i didn't see connectic
was the man. >> jeb was the man. that's largerly mythological. george w. bush ran a very good campaign for congress in west texas in 1978 when he was 32 years old. >> a campaign -- >> the -- this is in a heavily democratic district. george w. bush wasn't expected to win the republican nomination,let alone run a pretty good racing in that district. ken hans was the favorite. and yet he came within a couple of percentage points of winning that race. largely because ken hans...
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thought he was so good. so strong when he was watching out legal before talking about us both the movie that made you made you famous do you think it still is your most important porton film that you've made or differently i mean. definitely so many directors have their one film where when they know where they know it's the one it's the one that changed everything for you and the people will talk forever about it so i'm lucky enough that i have third film what was it about this book do you think. many reasons first of all i think for the world to be forced to relate to all or even. nazis in the submarine in the beginning when the film was screened first in los angeles and it says on the very beginning it says forty from forty thousand german submarines thirty thousand died when i was a big supporter bigger plot. and we offer all my god this is not going well at the end. of the film after two and a half hours. they all clapped and there was a standing ovation there for ever so the film turned this hostile aud
thought he was so good. so strong when he was watching out legal before talking about us both the movie that made you made you famous do you think it still is your most important porton film that you've made or differently i mean. definitely so many directors have their one film where when they know where they know it's the one it's the one that changed everything for you and the people will talk forever about it so i'm lucky enough that i have third film what was it about this book do you...
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Apr 25, 2018
04/18
by
MSNBCW
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>> no, there was not. >> it turns out it was first reported, the ig report was in 20 2012. navy medical inspector gem. basically a bad workplace environment for the medical staff working under jackson's leadership at the white house. now tonight i need to tell you the white house mounted a strangest to save ronney jackson's nomination. in order to save his nomination, they have second quarter lated positive evaluations by both president obama and president trump. this is evaluations at his performance as a white house doctor. but they also made a weird decision about the inspector general report in 2012. first they told organizations including nbc news ronney jackson has never been the subject of an inspector general review. yeah, he has, the ap reported it. shortly after those remarks the white house, itself, distributed the inspector general review that is about ronney jackson. they said it doesn't exist and gave it to reporters. that was weird. so now we've got the inspector general report. it's not good. i don't know why they sent this around if they were trying to save
>> no, there was not. >> it turns out it was first reported, the ig report was in 20 2012. navy medical inspector gem. basically a bad workplace environment for the medical staff working under jackson's leadership at the white house. now tonight i need to tell you the white house mounted a strangest to save ronney jackson's nomination. in order to save his nomination, they have second quarter lated positive evaluations by both president obama and president trump. this is evaluations...
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was in exile and there was no opposition and when he was fearless she was not scared of the white apartheid government she was very outspoken they kept on banning has said that she couldn't be outspent and they kept on trying to break and i think in the end maybe did break you know we've got a clip here that shows her speaking about this opinion that she had concerning the white man's hate towards the black man in south africa take a look when i was in solitary confinement. for those eighteen months. i would regard that is really my turning point in my political outlook. i must confess up to that state i was not how we the extent to which the afrikaners hated it made its country. and that stayed with her to the differ life to this but i mean she was making that statement to white men to my father boys around pre-con and but she was treated very badly when she was in solitary confinement eighteen months at the time she had children who were eleven ten eleven very young children who didn't know where they fall if the father was in prison a mother in solitary confinement and she was treated ve
was in exile and there was no opposition and when he was fearless she was not scared of the white apartheid government she was very outspoken they kept on banning has said that she couldn't be outspent and they kept on trying to break and i think in the end maybe did break you know we've got a clip here that shows her speaking about this opinion that she had concerning the white man's hate towards the black man in south africa take a look when i was in solitary confinement. for those eighteen...
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Apr 17, 2018
04/18
by
CNNW
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>> i was. >> what was that like? >> there was 20 minutes of leadup to the disclosure of who this was. there was a consistent back and forth between the judge and michael cohen's lawyer who was fighting to keep from disclosing this information which had been ordered disclosed last friday. the judge had ordered this information disclosed. and they disclosed two of the three names. they refused to disclose the third name. so there was a lot of foreplay, if you will, for about 20 minutes in the courtroom as to whether this name was going to be disclosed. at one point in time michael cohen's attorney suggested that the name would be disclosed in camera, or privately, to the judge, would be written on a piece of paper and handed to the judge. and judge wood was having none of that. ultimately she said i want you to disclose the name publicly now and gave the attorney the option of doing it either orally or in writing. i thought for sure he would scribble it on a piece of paper and hand to it the judge. the reason, as an ex
>> i was. >> what was that like? >> there was 20 minutes of leadup to the disclosure of who this was. there was a consistent back and forth between the judge and michael cohen's lawyer who was fighting to keep from disclosing this information which had been ordered disclosed last friday. the judge had ordered this information disclosed. and they disclosed two of the three names. they refused to disclose the third name. so there was a lot of foreplay, if you will, for about 20...