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Jun 4, 2012
06/12
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, less white, least white and not white. many people who have been in the country originally or have come here as immigrants, very different than african-americans, who did not come here on their own, have been considered not to be white. even people here who are women were not considered to be people. >> and your question. >> and the question -- no -- the question is as we start looking at this issue in today's world, where white people are becoming a minority in this country, is there a difference in how we actually approach it in terms of how we change what's going on in this country? whether we consider who is not white or who is black? >> that's a very interesting question. and i think that one of the lessons that i draw from the stories of these three families is that, i mean, in some ways maybe it's less importance to talk about race and drops of blood than talk about racism and inequality. so, you know, we can think of blackness in terms of black blood. but plenty of white people have black blood, too. so what does t
, less white, least white and not white. many people who have been in the country originally or have come here as immigrants, very different than african-americans, who did not come here on their own, have been considered not to be white. even people here who are women were not considered to be people. >> and your question. >> and the question -- no -- the question is as we start looking at this issue in today's world, where white people are becoming a minority in this country, is...
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Jun 3, 2012
06/12
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WUSA
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today are white. this is the first time in history that white births registered below 50%, so says the leading demographer at the institution, dr. william fry. he says, we have been william f he says, we hain the last several years. the u.s. cencus data on the ship was made public for the 12- july. dr. fry says, last july. dr. fry says, "this is an important tipping ., a transformation from a mostly white baby boomer culture to the more globalized, multi- ethnic country that we are becoming." the new york times calls this a milestone for the nation. here's the times piece. "such a turn has been long- expected. but no one was certain when the moment would arrive. signaling a milestone for a nation whose governor. was founded by white europeans and has wrestled with issues of race from the days of slavery through a civil war, bitter civil rights battles and most recently highly charged debates over efforts to restrict immigration." question, is the hispanic birthrate surging or is the white birthrate be
today are white. this is the first time in history that white births registered below 50%, so says the leading demographer at the institution, dr. william fry. he says, we have been william f he says, we hain the last several years. the u.s. cencus data on the ship was made public for the 12- july. dr. fry says, last july. dr. fry says, "this is an important tipping ., a transformation from a mostly white baby boomer culture to the more globalized, multi- ethnic country that we are...
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Jun 16, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 105
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but white kept his own counsel. one of his first opinions, in fact, was a dissent on the decision invalidating criminal punishment for habitual use of drugs, which the majority of the court thought penalized a status, not an act, in violation of the due process clause of the 14th amendment. the case was called robinson versus california. and white wrote that the majority in the case was writing into the constitution its own abstract notions of how to best handle the narcotics problem, displacing the expert understanding of either the states or the congress. the early dissent was an overture to his first famous opinion, another dissent, in a case now known to every american with access to a television set, miranda versus arizona. white viewed the majority opinion as inconsistent with the texts, precedent, and sound policy. his opinion closed on a raw note, widely quoted at the time. "in some unknown number of cases, the court's rule will return a killer, rapist or other killer to the streets and the environment which
but white kept his own counsel. one of his first opinions, in fact, was a dissent on the decision invalidating criminal punishment for habitual use of drugs, which the majority of the court thought penalized a status, not an act, in violation of the due process clause of the 14th amendment. the case was called robinson versus california. and white wrote that the majority in the case was writing into the constitution its own abstract notions of how to best handle the narcotics problem,...
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Jun 3, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 78
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good jobs, if that you are lawyering in white firms and working at an all-white bank or working at "the new yorker," they cannot be seen with us. so this is for us a loss. this is a source of pain and such a pain to us. and but the thing about it is that we mourn them because the word passed means synonym for dead. we mourn them because we can no longer see them again. what's so moving about your sfoer of steven wahl, we see him for a long time trying to t tenaciously hold you to his colored an sesors. they called them colored at that point. his father was the first black commissioned cap faine in the american civil war. the first everything in washington, and to some extent he's trying to hold onto it. at some point he makes a decision that he's tired of sitting on the back of the bus, and he biuilds himself a beautiful house in the brooklyn neighborhood. he goes there, marries a white wife. goes there with his blonde, blue-eyed daughter and enrolls her in public school. and what happens then, of course, comes a knock on the door. right? people who know -- because had he followed hi
good jobs, if that you are lawyering in white firms and working at an all-white bank or working at "the new yorker," they cannot be seen with us. so this is for us a loss. this is a source of pain and such a pain to us. and but the thing about it is that we mourn them because the word passed means synonym for dead. we mourn them because we can no longer see them again. what's so moving about your sfoer of steven wahl, we see him for a long time trying to t tenaciously hold you to his...
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Jun 4, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 83
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people that become white, once they become white and they can no longer be seen in public with us and can no longer really risk -- especially if they have good jobs, if they're lawyering in white firms, working at an all-white banking, working at, say, the new yorker -- no, just coincidental. they cannot be seen with us. so this is for us a loss. this is a source of pain and such a pain to us. and but the thing about it is that we mourn them because the word passed means synonym for dead. we mourn them because we can no longer see them again. what's so moving about your story of steven wahl, we see him for a long time trying to tenaciously hold on to his colored ancestors. they called them colored at that point. his father was the first black commissioned captain in the civil war, the first everything in washington, and to some extent, he's trying to hold on to it. but at some point, he makes a decision that he's tired of sitting on the back of the bus, and he builds himself a beautiful house in a brooklyn neighborhood. he goes there, marries a white wife. goes there with his blond, b
people that become white, once they become white and they can no longer be seen in public with us and can no longer really risk -- especially if they have good jobs, if they're lawyering in white firms, working at an all-white banking, working at, say, the new yorker -- no, just coincidental. they cannot be seen with us. so this is for us a loss. this is a source of pain and such a pain to us. and but the thing about it is that we mourn them because the word passed means synonym for dead. we...
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Jun 10, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 100
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the white house didn't have very many. i mean, i can't -- scarlett hills, i can't remember who they might have had. >> the secretarial staff. >> the secretarial staff. this is the point act sexism that was made last night. it was an invisible world, and here we had -- we would go into the white house and we'd get nothing from these senior -- from higbee, or higbee had a higbee. the deputy assistants and whatnot, but if you talked to their secretaries and they felt comfortable, weren't represented by somebody from the white house staff that worked outside, including remarkably john's own secretary, who was a very forthright person and gave us enormous help. that's when we began to realize we could reconstruct things. so there was a day, i remember going to the monical restaurant right near capitol hill. they have paper -- cloth tops over -- paper -- >> tablecloths. >> table cloths over the regular white tablecloth, and we sat there and said, this is not the way to investigate. i was systems analyst among other things and ma
the white house didn't have very many. i mean, i can't -- scarlett hills, i can't remember who they might have had. >> the secretarial staff. >> the secretarial staff. this is the point act sexism that was made last night. it was an invisible world, and here we had -- we would go into the white house and we'd get nothing from these senior -- from higbee, or higbee had a higbee. the deputy assistants and whatnot, but if you talked to their secretaries and they felt comfortable,...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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and the white house is getting fbi reports because a friend of the fbi is -- a friend of the white house is the acting director, but also the fbi assumes that, you know, that the white house ought to know about this. so you have, in a sense, the white house being tipped off as the fbi continues its investigation, the white house is trying to figure out a way to stop the fbi investigation. so here the president is talking to john ehrlichman, his domestic adviser, about what jeb macgruder, is going to have to do to stop the investigation. at this point in july of '72, it's assumed he's going to have to take the fall. the president then suggests what he should say to investigators. >> well, the story
and the white house is getting fbi reports because a friend of the fbi is -- a friend of the white house is the acting director, but also the fbi assumes that, you know, that the white house ought to know about this. so you have, in a sense, the white house being tipped off as the fbi continues its investigation, the white house is trying to figure out a way to stop the fbi investigation. so here the president is talking to john ehrlichman, his domestic adviser, about what jeb macgruder, is...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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MSNBCW
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even though 63.7% of white are nonhispanic whites, which is a reminder, that the white vote is stillate blo bloc that cannot be ignored. a last time a presidential candidate won the white vote? one clue, the same year that the 24th amendment abolished the jim crow practice of the poll tax. yes, the last time a democrat won the white vote was in 1964, wh lyndon johnson routed goldwater. jimmy carter came close, with 47%. no other democrat became within striking distance of the white majority. bill clinton won 39%. president obama made up ground with white voters when he won 43% of support in 2008. this past tuesday, a gallup daily tracking poll indicated that the president is now losing ground among those white voters, polling 38% support over the last month. seems worry i some, until you remember that 38% is exactly the level of support that candidate obama enjoyed in the spring of 2008, according to the same folks at gallup. what should we make of the elusive white voters. will president obama find ways to win him back in his election coalition? can he win with robust racial coaliti
even though 63.7% of white are nonhispanic whites, which is a reminder, that the white vote is stillate blo bloc that cannot be ignored. a last time a presidential candidate won the white vote? one clue, the same year that the 24th amendment abolished the jim crow practice of the poll tax. yes, the last time a democrat won the white vote was in 1964, wh lyndon johnson routed goldwater. jimmy carter came close, with 47%. no other democrat became within striking distance of the white majority....
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 142
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white then face aid choice of where to practice law. many of his fellow clerks stayed in washington, but the pull of home and family was too strong, and he returned to colorado to practice in denver. besides, denver suggested but did not promise that he would be able as he told a fellow clerk to keep my name out of the god damn newspapers. his marriage to mary ann lloyd stearns, daughter of the president of the university of colorado, in 1946, meant that all his extended family were within a 50 mile radius of denver, as were a wealth of friends and the favorite pastimes of his youth, especially fly fishing and hiking in the foothills. for more than a decade white enjoyed a widely varied legal practice ranging from real estate to corporate work, anti-trust, labor law, and on to tax and litigation including complex anti-trust cases and simple one-day trials. his name rarely appeared in the public print, although he devoted an enormous amount of time to a wide variety of charitable activities. a registered democrat he denied constant invit
white then face aid choice of where to practice law. many of his fellow clerks stayed in washington, but the pull of home and family was too strong, and he returned to colorado to practice in denver. besides, denver suggested but did not promise that he would be able as he told a fellow clerk to keep my name out of the god damn newspapers. his marriage to mary ann lloyd stearns, daughter of the president of the university of colorado, in 1946, meant that all his extended family were within a 50...
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Jun 20, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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>> between the bush white house and the obama white house, i'd say 14, 15 times. >> since the 1705 has been in place, how many times have you been to the white house? this administration, how many times have you been to the white house? >> i'd say six or seven times. >> who did you talk with when you were at the white house? >> well, i was a part of a large group. once meeting with president obama. >> did you talk about this loan guarantee program when you met with president obama. >> we talked about climate change. >> who else have you talked with at the white house? >> vice president biden. there i spoke with him about the clean energy standard. but mainly, i spoke with carol brown or with -- once with valerie jarrett. that was all about the nuclear guarantee program. >> you guys are also involved with the bright source project as well, correct? >> that's ivan project. >> are you familiar with this e-mail? this was brought up in our last hearing when mr. woolard was here with bright source. the e-mail from mr. woolard to mr. silver at the department of energy asking him to edit and p
>> between the bush white house and the obama white house, i'd say 14, 15 times. >> since the 1705 has been in place, how many times have you been to the white house? this administration, how many times have you been to the white house? >> i'd say six or seven times. >> who did you talk with when you were at the white house? >> well, i was a part of a large group. once meeting with president obama. >> did you talk about this loan guarantee program when you...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 124
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both white and his older brother clayton s. sam white worked beet fields from the tichl that they could wield a hoe. winters were harsh. spring brought strong winds off the front rains, and summers were hot and dry. character was shaped in the relentless competition between the land and the elements. self-reliance was not an ab strakz. by graduating first in his class like his brother before him, byron white earned a full tuition scholarship to the university of colorado. there he was a star in three sports. football, basketball, and baseball. president of the student body, phi beta kappa, and like his brother before him, a roads scholar. his performance during his senior year is still statistically one of the most impressive in the history of intercollegiate football. it was capped by all american honors and bril yand plays. so great of the press interest in the young student athlete that the new york basketball writers association had a showcase for white and his teammates. white delayed his mat rick las vegas to accept the h
both white and his older brother clayton s. sam white worked beet fields from the tichl that they could wield a hoe. winters were harsh. spring brought strong winds off the front rains, and summers were hot and dry. character was shaped in the relentless competition between the land and the elements. self-reliance was not an ab strakz. by graduating first in his class like his brother before him, byron white earned a full tuition scholarship to the university of colorado. there he was a star in...
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127
Jun 9, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 127
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good jobs, if that you are lawyering in white firms and working at an all-white bank or working at "the new yorker," just coincidence. they cannot be seen with us. so this is for us a loss. this is a source of pain and such a pain to us. and but the thing about it is that we mourn them because the word passed means synonym for dead. we mourn them because we can no longer see them again. what's so moving about your story of steven wahl. we see him for a long time trying to tenaciously hold on to his colored ancestors. they called them colored at that point.
good jobs, if that you are lawyering in white firms and working at an all-white bank or working at "the new yorker," just coincidence. they cannot be seen with us. so this is for us a loss. this is a source of pain and such a pain to us. and but the thing about it is that we mourn them because the word passed means synonym for dead. we mourn them because we can no longer see them again. what's so moving about your story of steven wahl. we see him for a long time trying to tenaciously...
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Jun 22, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 114
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much higher rates than whites? is george zimmerman a bigot, or is he a concerned citizen? is trayvon martin an innocent victim or a thug in training? these are the ways in which we typically discuss race, and what i want to suggest is that our focus on character and conscious racial bias may actually mask the ways in which we can still achieve racially disproportionate consequences, even in the absence of conscious bias. and so the reason for this, in my view, is based on something that i call suspicion cascades. and these are the systemic and predictable errors in decision-making that occur because of the way that we all think. so i just want to talk about that very briefly. the way that our minds work, we tend to make associations between concepts in order to process information quickly. so you can imagine if i had to figure out how to use this pen every time i came across a pen, i wouldn't be able to function. so our minds make these automatic associations, so if you see the word doctor, for example, your mind w
much higher rates than whites? is george zimmerman a bigot, or is he a concerned citizen? is trayvon martin an innocent victim or a thug in training? these are the ways in which we typically discuss race, and what i want to suggest is that our focus on character and conscious racial bias may actually mask the ways in which we can still achieve racially disproportionate consequences, even in the absence of conscious bias. and so the reason for this, in my view, is based on something that i call...
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Jun 18, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 131
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and the white house is getting fbi reports because a friend of the fbi is -- a friend of the white house is the acting director, but also the fbi assumes that, you know, that the white house ought to know about this. so you have, in a sense, the white house being tipped off as the fbi continues its investigation, the white house is trying to figure out a way to stop the fbi investigation. so here the president is talking to john ehrlichman, his domestic adviser, about what jeb macgruder, is going to have to do to stop the investigation. at this point in july of '72, it's assumed he's going to have to take the fall. the president then suggests what he should say to investigators. >> well, the story basically is that -- so that macgruder when you say take a slide, he can't. >> no, i don't think so. i don't think so. >> because they'll convict him. >> oh, they'll convict him by somebody else's testimony. he doesn't gain anything. >> so what the hell, what does he do? >> no, he has to go in and say well, i did this and it was a bad thing to do and i got carried away, and i feel terrible abou
and the white house is getting fbi reports because a friend of the fbi is -- a friend of the white house is the acting director, but also the fbi assumes that, you know, that the white house ought to know about this. so you have, in a sense, the white house being tipped off as the fbi continues its investigation, the white house is trying to figure out a way to stop the fbi investigation. so here the president is talking to john ehrlichman, his domestic adviser, about what jeb macgruder, is...
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282
Jun 15, 2012
06/12
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WBAL
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eye 282
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white is versatile.azer. >> if you stain you have a problem. >> if you stain it a little bit, not too many problems. summertime, a grass stain, natural dirt from walking around, that's not a problem. a couple of wrinkles, you've just got to kind of own it and go with it. >> thank you very much. >>> casual daytime look. when it gets hot, michael in white shorts. >> the thing about white shorts, some guys know they can wear them for golf. at gq we think there's a way to make it hipper. instead of pink polo, going super preppy or dorky, has he a denim shirt, looking more cool, going to have drinks at a summertime barbecue, top it off with a straw fedora, makes you hot. a change-up the way you think of white shorts. >> the thing is contrast. >> the don johnson comes into play when you wear electric orange. >> get everyone out here. >> will welch, thank you so much. gentlemen, thank you. you look terrific. when we come back, a father's day feast for the steak loving dads right after these messages. i used to
white is versatile.azer. >> if you stain you have a problem. >> if you stain it a little bit, not too many problems. summertime, a grass stain, natural dirt from walking around, that's not a problem. a couple of wrinkles, you've just got to kind of own it and go with it. >> thank you very much. >>> casual daytime look. when it gets hot, michael in white shorts. >> the thing about white shorts, some guys know they can wear them for golf. at gq we think there's a...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
77
77
Jun 7, 2012
06/12
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SFGTV
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eye 77
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you can imagine that if you are going to have a white zone, you would not want for people to be able to actually obstruct it, which is the way the law currently works. what we are proposing is simply, in a very, and sensible way, adding a new section to the police code that would make it illegal to obstruct the white zone or the adjacent sidewalk between the curb and fronting the building. by obstruction, we mean the placement of objects, materials, substances or other material on the sidewalk. anytime you take up public space, you want to be sure your crafting it in a very narrow way. i want to thank hillary in my office who has been working with community members and with the city attorney's office to be sure this is done in the most narrowly tailored way that we can do it. the prohibition that we're talking about would apply during the hours that the white zone is restricted to passengers loading and unloading. it really strikes the white -- right balance in making sure that open spaces in san francisco remain open and public. it is specifically targeted to deal with the issue tha
you can imagine that if you are going to have a white zone, you would not want for people to be able to actually obstruct it, which is the way the law currently works. what we are proposing is simply, in a very, and sensible way, adding a new section to the police code that would make it illegal to obstruct the white zone or the adjacent sidewalk between the curb and fronting the building. by obstruction, we mean the placement of objects, materials, substances or other material on the sidewalk....
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Jun 9, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 106
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it was an invisible world, and here we would sgee the white house sboe ingo into the white house and get nothing. the deputy assistants and whatnot, but if you talked to their secretaries and they felt comfortable, weren't represented by somebody from the white house staff that worked outside, including remarkably john's own secretary, who was a very forthright person and gave us enormous help. that's when we began to realize we could reconstruct things. so there was a day, i remember going to the monica restaurant right near capitol hill. they have paper -- cloth tops -- >> tablecloths. >> over the regular white tablecloth and we sat there and said, this is not the way to investigate. i was systems analyst among other things and made an organizational chart of the white house. the question was, here's nixon. here's dean. we knew from john's testimony john didn't have notes, material, little on the meetings with the president. there wasn't going to be paper documentation. we had to figure out who else would know so made a satellite chart of all the people in touch wi with nixon. all
it was an invisible world, and here we would sgee the white house sboe ingo into the white house and get nothing. the deputy assistants and whatnot, but if you talked to their secretaries and they felt comfortable, weren't represented by somebody from the white house staff that worked outside, including remarkably john's own secretary, who was a very forthright person and gave us enormous help. that's when we began to realize we could reconstruct things. so there was a day, i remember going to...
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443
Jun 12, 2012
06/12
by
COM
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eye 443
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white vote.ut since then, he's inviting rappers to the white house, wife's growing collard greens on the garden. getting angry about the one percent and paying your fair share. and this. ♪ ( cheers and applause ) >> first it's... perfect pitch. white voters are looking around thinking was he always this black? it all adds up to white flight, jon >> jon: white flight? so romney is positioning his candidacy as? >> the suburbs. that's right, jon. it's a nice safe enclave where white people can hike up their pants and basketball courts still have nets and people can say [bleep] like this. >> what's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. >> and other people will know what that means. now that's how you get the white vote. well done, mitt romney. meanwhile, obama is still out there posing with black people. god, we get it. you're down. >> jon: i think that's his family. >> right, jon. we're all related, right. look. the point is you're not losing the black vote unless you do something crazy like
white vote.ut since then, he's inviting rappers to the white house, wife's growing collard greens on the garden. getting angry about the one percent and paying your fair share. and this. ♪ ( cheers and applause ) >> first it's... perfect pitch. white voters are looking around thinking was he always this black? it all adds up to white flight, jon >> jon: white flight? so romney is positioning his candidacy as? >> the suburbs. that's right, jon. it's a nice safe enclave where...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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CNNW
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eye 183
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where the problem is most severe, i looked at the white middle class anxiety and a lot of white middlete for barack obama in 2008, but they are feeling the stress in their pocket book and feeling strain and know a family member who doesn't have a job and you put your finger on it. the economic issues are trumping the issues of it's cool to be for barack obama. >> it's a lot less about race i think than it is about history. four years ago, obama was a phenomenon nan and a historical moment and opportunity. you can only make history once and he made it. now he is no longer the historical figure. he is the gray haired president who has a four-year record that he has to defend and contend with. we are talking about two different barack obama. he is not less or more black than he was four years ago. it's the historical component that is the determinate factor. >> one last point. barack obama does have to get 40% of the white vote. it's hard to go over the finish line if he doesn't get 4 out of 10. he has work to do. >> there is the period on this segment. thank you. >> i said enough already
where the problem is most severe, i looked at the white middle class anxiety and a lot of white middlete for barack obama in 2008, but they are feeling the stress in their pocket book and feeling strain and know a family member who doesn't have a job and you put your finger on it. the economic issues are trumping the issues of it's cool to be for barack obama. >> it's a lot less about race i think than it is about history. four years ago, obama was a phenomenon nan and a historical moment...
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187
Jun 30, 2012
06/12
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KQEH
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eye 187
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and in effect, it made invisible white criminality. we don't talk about white criminality. we don't talk about the white prison population. nobody, no average person on the street can tell you how many white men are in prison or white men between the ages of 18 and 35, who are likely to spend time in prison. actually, the truth is the number is greater now today than it was 30 years ago, because the size of the prison system has also increased the number of white men. >> so this is how black criminality emerges along with disease and intelligence, the size of the brain? >> correct. >> as a fundamental measure of black inferiority? >> correct. >> with consequences down to the moment. >> that's right. >> so given the weight of history that you carry with you as a scholar and as a human being, given the heavy hand of history on our backs, how are you going to celebrate the fourth of july? seriously. can you be unaware of all this when you're having that barbecue? >> this is a culture of escapism. let's not forget this. so i probably will go see some blockbuster hollywood movie
and in effect, it made invisible white criminality. we don't talk about white criminality. we don't talk about the white prison population. nobody, no average person on the street can tell you how many white men are in prison or white men between the ages of 18 and 35, who are likely to spend time in prison. actually, the truth is the number is greater now today than it was 30 years ago, because the size of the prison system has also increased the number of white men. >> so this is how...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
77
77
Jun 27, 2012
06/12
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SFGTV
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we applied and were granted a white zone by the mta. that was in january of this year while it has been operating very well come upon -- very well, other objects of design made it very difficult for our clients to get in and out of their cars. we are here in support of the ordinance. it will create tremendous help for our clients, for their ability to be dropped off without obstruction. [tone] and also to be protecting against injury from obstructions in their path. i appreciate the supervisors for their leadership on this issue. we look forward to the upcoming results. thank you. supervisor avalos: thank you very much. zeno other member of the public coming forward, we will close public comment. supervisor mar: i want to thank community organizations and supervisor campos and supervisor avalos for bringing this forward. i would like to be added to this. supervisor avalos: very good. problems, can we accept the amendment from supervisor campos? ok, we will accept the amendment. we can move to move forward with recommendations. so done.
we applied and were granted a white zone by the mta. that was in january of this year while it has been operating very well come upon -- very well, other objects of design made it very difficult for our clients to get in and out of their cars. we are here in support of the ordinance. it will create tremendous help for our clients, for their ability to be dropped off without obstruction. [tone] and also to be protecting against injury from obstructions in their path. i appreciate the supervisors...
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Jun 10, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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this is a white man's war. the united states government has legalized slavery its entire existence, there is no state where you are treated equally. you have been listening to all of this about a white man's war. the black families seemed to be closer to the economic margins. your family will probably face hardship and you might be discriminated against. why would you want to enlist and some say don't for all of those reasons. and my point here is we shouldn't, we shouldn't talk about white opinion, black opinion. there are divisions even among the groups you think of as unified. at the end of the day, though, many prominent black northerners did encourage enlistment and come out in favor. notably frederick douglas. he worked hard as a recruiter among black soldiers. men of color to arms, that's douglass' line. his notion is you put those brass letters on a black man and there is no question not only has he gotten freedom but citizenship so. for douglass, and for people who think like him, army service is an im
this is a white man's war. the united states government has legalized slavery its entire existence, there is no state where you are treated equally. you have been listening to all of this about a white man's war. the black families seemed to be closer to the economic margins. your family will probably face hardship and you might be discriminated against. why would you want to enlist and some say don't for all of those reasons. and my point here is we shouldn't, we shouldn't talk about white...
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Jun 20, 2012
06/12
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FOXNEWS
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only white house documents.aybe some of the documents that the committee is asking for involve white house aides. therefore 2 it would become white house documents that gets into kind of a shady area. there are also the political implications of this. that cuts both ways. on one hand, "fast and furious" is a very troubling scandal the justice department or the bureau of alcohol, tobacco and firearms would have been involved in the failed gun-walking operation and some of these weapons ended up being used by the cartel, in one case, in the case of 1a tf agent, were used to kill brian terry. on the other hand, if you get into a situation where this is seen highly political and house republicans are involved in some issue and not the economy, some kind of political back and forth, this may fulfill the white house narrative that house republicans are more interested in hunts than they are in fixing the country. so i think there is a danger of this backfiring on both sides. there is some political risk on both sides
only white house documents.aybe some of the documents that the committee is asking for involve white house aides. therefore 2 it would become white house documents that gets into kind of a shady area. there are also the political implications of this. that cuts both ways. on one hand, "fast and furious" is a very troubling scandal the justice department or the bureau of alcohol, tobacco and firearms would have been involved in the failed gun-walking operation and some of these weapons...
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Jun 16, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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aren't you whizzer white?" white took a sip of coffee, measured her slowly, and replied in a soft voice, "i was." f. scott fitzgerald famously said that there are no second acts in american lives. there must have been times when byron white wished that his first act could be forgotten once and for all. for his entire public career, white was constantly framed in the public eye by his headline-making first act, an act, so to speak, that made him a nationwide household name while he was still a teenager but which penalized the shy, modest young man with expectations he could not foresee, did not wish, and sometimes could not meet. but we're already ahead of the game. summary of act one -- byron raymond white was born june 17th, 1918, in ft. collins, colorado, but he grew up 11 miles away in wellington, population 500 at the time. his father managed a lumberyard. wellington's economy was dominated by sugar beets, a crop demanding attention constantly and back-breaking work. both white and his older brother, clayto
aren't you whizzer white?" white took a sip of coffee, measured her slowly, and replied in a soft voice, "i was." f. scott fitzgerald famously said that there are no second acts in american lives. there must have been times when byron white wished that his first act could be forgotten once and for all. for his entire public career, white was constantly framed in the public eye by his headline-making first act, an act, so to speak, that made him a nationwide household name while...
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Jun 16, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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the rule of law does not stop at the white house door. watergate demonstrated that. [ applause ] >> i am jim layer of the pbs newshour best known on this evening as the fellow co-anchor of the senate watergate hearings. first time my partner robert mcneil and i worked together. so here we are and the question is what was watergate? what is it now? what will it be tomorrow and all the tomorrows still to come. in the beginning as mary said and as you all know it was in fact just a piece of real estate. this particular building. unless somebody demolishes it, it doesn't like like it's going to happen anytime soon, it may always be the watergate as a building. but it was always a crime. a crime not of passion. a crime not of greed. but a crime of corruption. political corruption of constitutions by individuals high and low who saw the need and/or the opportunity to violate laws and standards of personal conduct. their lives were changed forever by what they did. most paid an enormous price in a loss of liberty and a loss of reputation. some o
the rule of law does not stop at the white house door. watergate demonstrated that. [ applause ] >> i am jim layer of the pbs newshour best known on this evening as the fellow co-anchor of the senate watergate hearings. first time my partner robert mcneil and i worked together. so here we are and the question is what was watergate? what is it now? what will it be tomorrow and all the tomorrows still to come. in the beginning as mary said and as you all know it was in fact just a piece of...
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Jun 24, 2012
06/12
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WBFF
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the white house hases their self to for that.they made voters deeply suspicious of the white house and justice department . no one in obama's cabinet with a worse relationship with congress than holder. and third, when the white house was called to turn over the documents, there was not the life of an american federal agent that was lostt. this is so much more serious and the stakes are dire and grave. >> jeff, how does the romney campaign feel about the confrontation. there is talk whether thiare entitled. this plays in the narrative that republicans are obstructionist and involved in washington gotcha games. and i have to say, i haven't heard much from boston headquarters and romney campaign. >> this is one of those things that they are fine witha letting it play out. if it is a dominating issues with the republicans on the hill and democrats in the white house and overtook the economy that would be a problem. that is not likely to happen. and this is about the economy. and how house republicans and house speaker boehner skieds
the white house hases their self to for that.they made voters deeply suspicious of the white house and justice department . no one in obama's cabinet with a worse relationship with congress than holder. and third, when the white house was called to turn over the documents, there was not the life of an american federal agent that was lostt. this is so much more serious and the stakes are dire and grave. >> jeff, how does the romney campaign feel about the confrontation. there is talk...
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Jun 18, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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the white house created this investigatory unit in the white house, and it didn't use subpoenas to acquire information. that's where the problem arises. here, a little bit later in 1971, the white house wants better political intelligence for the pending 1972 elections. the president appears was concerned about his re-election. and so here we have information laying out for you what we know and what one can know about the extent to which the white house sponsored what was then called a dirty tricks operation to undermine the campaigns of potential adversaries and launched an intelligence organization that would use wiretapping and surreptitious entry to acquire information about the president's adversaries. the exhibit is very clear about what we know and what we don't know. in fact, there's a whole panel here that lays out based on the trial testimony, on the tapes, on the documents that the watergate special prosecution force and the house judiciary committee looked at and we've looked at, and materials that we had in our collection, that we were able to release in the last few years. th
the white house created this investigatory unit in the white house, and it didn't use subpoenas to acquire information. that's where the problem arises. here, a little bit later in 1971, the white house wants better political intelligence for the pending 1972 elections. the president appears was concerned about his re-election. and so here we have information laying out for you what we know and what one can know about the extent to which the white house sponsored what was then called a dirty...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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CNNW
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what about the white people? the real deciders in the presidential election. why isn't anybody talking about them? guess what? we are. >>> and not so real rierlt tv. >> i am so very sorry. >> he lied. so did the makers of this show. does hollywood really think we're that dumb? more importantly, are we that gullible. >>> so there's no cushioning this one. here you go. will anyone still believe in god in 50 years? an odd question. maybe it is. here's why we're asking it. today more people than ever are questioning god's existence. five areas ago 83% of people, 83%, under the age of 30, said they never doubted the existence of god. now that number is down to 68%. joining me is linda lascolla who help approachers who openly question their faith and david silverman who is the president american atheist incorporated. more people are having doubts. could we be looking at a gradual phasing out of god over the next several decades? i'll start with eye miss lascolla. the question again, please? >> why are we seeing a doubt
what about the white people? the real deciders in the presidential election. why isn't anybody talking about them? guess what? we are. >>> and not so real rierlt tv. >> i am so very sorry. >> he lied. so did the makers of this show. does hollywood really think we're that dumb? more importantly, are we that gullible. >>> so there's no cushioning this one. here you go. will anyone still believe in god in 50 years? an odd question. maybe it is. here's why we're asking...
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Jun 16, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 171
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first the white house. what did the burning of the white house mean? the invasion and destruction of the capital city galvanized the american people. all opposition in america to the war vanished and i argue that it was dolley's work in making the capital city and in particular the white house a place in the american mind. that was both real to people who had never seen it and also a symbol. so when it was attacked the americans took it personally. second, the role of the unofficial sphere in the relocation debates. so when james and dolley come back to this crisis, they actually have a new crisis waiting for them. the capital city is in ruins and there's a movement to relocate the capital to new york or philadelphia or a number of places, which could have in hindsight been disastrous. i would need another speech to discuss the relocation debates, but in the end the congress vote to stay and it is my theory that dolley with her unofficial sphere made this town such a town for politics that even though everybody complained about the weather and the road
first the white house. what did the burning of the white house mean? the invasion and destruction of the capital city galvanized the american people. all opposition in america to the war vanished and i argue that it was dolley's work in making the capital city and in particular the white house a place in the american mind. that was both real to people who had never seen it and also a symbol. so when it was attacked the americans took it personally. second, the role of the unofficial sphere in...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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before burning the white house. it's probably for books, because wightman was a book seller and he was dragged in to represent the humiliation of the americans. he was the only american in the white house, the british bandit, and so i knew knowing more about the providence of this check that it was going to be very valuable. of the fact that wightman was the only person in the white house who wa an american. he later became mayor of washington. he was a notable grand mason, and so that's why i brought it. >> how long had washington been the seat of government by 1814? how long had it been the -- >> 1800. john adams came down in 1800, because the capitol ual used to in philadelphia, and he was the first president to live in the white house. every president has lived there except george washington. >> what was the city like in 1814? >> it was a mere embryo of what testimony aspired to be. it was a gawky village. it was so forgone that there was a british diplomat who wrote back to his mother after he saw the president
before burning the white house. it's probably for books, because wightman was a book seller and he was dragged in to represent the humiliation of the americans. he was the only american in the white house, the british bandit, and so i knew knowing more about the providence of this check that it was going to be very valuable. of the fact that wightman was the only person in the white house who wa an american. he later became mayor of washington. he was a notable grand mason, and so that's why i...
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Jun 10, 2012
06/12
by
KPIX
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eye 459
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that the white house wanted this out.seems that this investigation seems to be about whether or not the white house did let out national security information in order to make the president look like a stronger leader. what do you make of this right now? >> first you got to be very careful about creating a witch hunt for sources. and a witch hunt which you go after reporters because now more than ever we need real reporting on this presidency, on national security. on all these areas. the press is not the problem here. we got plenty of laws and if somebody inside is doing things with real national security secrets that they oughtn'tt be doing. let's be really careful before we start a witch hunt here. >> i completely agree with that. by having an investigation, was there real harm to the national security? i think that question needs to be addressed at a policy level and it's very difficult i know from doing stories like this where you are dealing with sensitive government secrets to modulate and be careful at the same tim
that the white house wanted this out.seems that this investigation seems to be about whether or not the white house did let out national security information in order to make the president look like a stronger leader. what do you make of this right now? >> first you got to be very careful about creating a witch hunt for sources. and a witch hunt which you go after reporters because now more than ever we need real reporting on this presidency, on national security. on all these areas. the...
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a panel with michael hastings and david sirota looking at the leaking scandal that's engulfed the white house this week happens to be forty years since the watergate scandal began with the break in so we can compare the reactions then and now we'll have all of that and more for you tonight including a dose of happy hour but first let's take a look what the mainstream media decided to miss. i'm going to try and keep this sweet and short today let's just say that there is a lot going on in the news and so the mainstream media is all over the place. jamie diamond explaining how j.p. morgan chase lost more than two were billion dollars attorney general eric holder facing new fire from republicans over the fast and furious botched gun sting programs president obama and mitt romney trade barbs over who understands the economic suffering of americans more caramel of a kid not being greedy and seen your traditional ice cream sundaes movie star sure marching to the seat once held by the injured congresswoman gabrielle giffords rushes defending its sale of arms to the syrian government but then a
a panel with michael hastings and david sirota looking at the leaking scandal that's engulfed the white house this week happens to be forty years since the watergate scandal began with the break in so we can compare the reactions then and now we'll have all of that and more for you tonight including a dose of happy hour but first let's take a look what the mainstream media decided to miss. i'm going to try and keep this sweet and short today let's just say that there is a lot going on in the...
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Jun 3, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN
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the white house. through the portrait of our presidents and first ladies, it is a wonderful tradition that here, in america's house, we honor those who have honored us. the tradition began with the acquisition of george washington's portrait in 1800. it was purchased by the united states government and viewed as such an important national trevor that it was the object of the white house historical association has commissioned a portrait of every president and first lady and acquired historical portraits of those previously missing from the white house collection. in our digital world, where so many images are mere flashes on a screen comedies enduring portraits of great american's by acclaimed artists are lasting tribute to our presidents and first ladies and will forever be part of the white house collection. today, the portraits of george w. bush, and first lady laura bush will be added to this unique collection of those who have occupied this house and served our nation with distinction. to those g
the white house. through the portrait of our presidents and first ladies, it is a wonderful tradition that here, in america's house, we honor those who have honored us. the tradition began with the acquisition of george washington's portrait in 1800. it was purchased by the united states government and viewed as such an important national trevor that it was the object of the white house historical association has commissioned a portrait of every president and first lady and acquired historical...
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Jun 20, 2012
06/12
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FOXNEWS
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that has been signed off on by the white house now. of information that has just come through. the request from attorney general eric holder that these documents requested be under executive privilege so they would not have to turn them over, and the white house has indeed put that executive privilege on those documents. that's how we start a brand-new hour of "america's newsroom." a lot going on this morning. i'm martha maccallum. bill: i'm bill hemmer. if morning, this 11th hour meeting between the attorney general and th chairman fell flat. this just in from the attorney general eric holder. martha: it says i respectfully request that you assert executive privilege over the identified documents. bill: william la jeunesse first to los angeles and william who has covered this story from the very beginning. what does this mean, william? >> reporter: it means we will have a big showdown between the executive and legislative branches because we do expect shortly that the house oversight committee will indeed approve the contempt citation
that has been signed off on by the white house now. of information that has just come through. the request from attorney general eric holder that these documents requested be under executive privilege so they would not have to turn them over, and the white house has indeed put that executive privilege on those documents. that's how we start a brand-new hour of "america's newsroom." a lot going on this morning. i'm martha maccallum. bill: i'm bill hemmer. if morning, this 11th hour...
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Jun 3, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN
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the white house staff. i want to thank fred ryan and the white house curator.m pleased that my portrait brings an interesting symmetry to the white house collection. it now starts and ends with a george w. [laughter] when the british burned the white house, dolly madison famously saved this portrait of the first to george w. [laughter] now, michele, if anything happens, there is your man. [laughter] [applause] i am pleased that when you are wondering these halls he would now be able to the is that this portrait and ask "what would george do?" [laughter] i am honored to be hanging there with the man they gave me the greatest give possible, -- the greatest gift possible, unconditional love, no. 41. [applause] i want to thank john howard for agreeing to use his considerable talents to paint my likeness. you have done a fine job with a challenging subjects. in the portrait there is a painting called "a charge to keep" that hung in the oval office for the eight years of my presidency. i asked john to include it b ecause it reminds me of the wonderful people with who
the white house staff. i want to thank fred ryan and the white house curator.m pleased that my portrait brings an interesting symmetry to the white house collection. it now starts and ends with a george w. [laughter] when the british burned the white house, dolly madison famously saved this portrait of the first to george w. [laughter] now, michele, if anything happens, there is your man. [laughter] [applause] i am pleased that when you are wondering these halls he would now be able to the is...
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Jun 16, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 202
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at this time when the madisons came into the white house, only part of the white house was finished. before the british came marched into washington and ended up burning the city to the ground. next slide. its original architect james hobin won the competition set forth by washington and jefferson in 1792 to build what washington envisioned for the president's house, i would design a building that should look forward and execute no more of it at present than night suit the circumstances that shall be first wanted. a plan more than executed in a future president when the wealth, population, importance of it shall stand upon a higher ground than they do present. washington really understood that the white house may evolve just as the united states may. the city's commissioners went to france looking for builders. they are commissioned to the city looking for mason men. they said "we wish to exhibit a grandeur of conception, a republican simplicity and true elegance of proportion that corresponds to a tempered freedom the good of little minds. contemporary counts describe the building a
at this time when the madisons came into the white house, only part of the white house was finished. before the british came marched into washington and ended up burning the city to the ground. next slide. its original architect james hobin won the competition set forth by washington and jefferson in 1792 to build what washington envisioned for the president's house, i would design a building that should look forward and execute no more of it at present than night suit the circumstances that...
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100
Jun 9, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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white house and hunt's number at the white house. so this is one of the reasons that alex very quickly got a call. alex, just follow me for a minute. when you heard about the break-in, what
white house and hunt's number at the white house. so this is one of the reasons that alex very quickly got a call. alex, just follow me for a minute. when you heard about the break-in, what