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Nov 5, 2016
11/16
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it wasn't until goldwater unified at all. kirk thinks intellectually but he didn't have the charisma to pull together an organization with a talent with the skill s set. he was terrible and knew that as well. he was purely an academic, with it goldwater had been a businessman and there was something about him he was able to pull things together, libertarians, conservatives so if there was movement it took about five or six years to coalesce just kind of odd it starts off as an anti-political movement but then quickly it becomes politicized. >> william f. buckley, friends or competitors? >> even though he's catholic so he could never totally be blue blood it was as much as possible, ivy league educated, he was the antithesis coming out of poverty and not catholic as provost and spiritualized, and all of the form of protestanti protestantism. had never traveled to the east and had no connection to publishers whereas the buckley's coming out of texas and connections with the kennedys. at the catholic thing held them down to a ce
it wasn't until goldwater unified at all. kirk thinks intellectually but he didn't have the charisma to pull together an organization with a talent with the skill s set. he was terrible and knew that as well. he was purely an academic, with it goldwater had been a businessman and there was something about him he was able to pull things together, libertarians, conservatives so if there was movement it took about five or six years to coalesce just kind of odd it starts off as an anti-political...
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Nov 3, 2016
11/16
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KUSA
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where did he work out, amazing historic figure or worse than goldwater? >> i think he is an amazing historic figure, he is doing better than goldwater, and the question is if he can win and win decisively. >> if you take bill clinton, you can't separate what people often, they were intertwined and overlapped. is the same for donald trump for all the republicans who wish he was more polished candidate or didn't say such inflammatory things? is that separated out from who he is or is he a package? >> i think he's a package. he is the only amateur we have never seen, came out of nowhere and beat 16 other candidates and got to be the nominee and now has a very real chance to win. that i he will make mistakes and do things that a more seasoned candidate wouldn't do, but on the other hand, he has tapped into and responded to an american desire for change that turned out to be dramatically stronger than anybody expected. >> former speaker of the house, newt gingrich, thank you for your time. >> thank you. >> thank you for coming by, and you can see the full inte
where did he work out, amazing historic figure or worse than goldwater? >> i think he is an amazing historic figure, he is doing better than goldwater, and the question is if he can win and win decisively. >> if you take bill clinton, you can't separate what people often, they were intertwined and overlapped. is the same for donald trump for all the republicans who wish he was more polished candidate or didn't say such inflammatory things? is that separated out from who he is or is...
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Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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that anger propelled the barry goldwater movement. >> conrad, let me ask you about the goldwater analogy. the other thing that is striking about goldwater is he was, as tim said, part of the system, a parliame parliamentarian. he was not promising to blow it up, and trump really is. if you listened to his speech on saturday, there's a kind of almost apocalyptic nature to what he says. we're going to destroy everything. we're going to tear down, you know, these decades-long establishment. the anti-elitism seems much more strident. first, would you agree? and i know you have signed a petition supporting him. do you approve of that kind of rhetoric? >> i don't interpret it quite as you do, fareed. i would differ quite sharply from the screed with which you opened the program. i recognize donald trump's shortcomings, but i think he's as a person in the 25 years i have known him, evolved to be a responsible comparative centrist. one aspect of this campaign is very underrecognized is that mrs. clinton and ms. trump both did manage to win the nomination against people well outside to use a foot
that anger propelled the barry goldwater movement. >> conrad, let me ask you about the goldwater analogy. the other thing that is striking about goldwater is he was, as tim said, part of the system, a parliame parliamentarian. he was not promising to blow it up, and trump really is. if you listened to his speech on saturday, there's a kind of almost apocalyptic nature to what he says. we're going to destroy everything. we're going to tear down, you know, these decades-long establishment....
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Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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CNNW
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that anger propelled the barry goldwater movement. >> conrad, let me ask you about the goldwater analogy. the other thing that is striking about goldwater is he was, as tim said, part of the system, a parliamentarian. he was not promising to blow it up, and trump really is. if you listened to his speech on saturday, there's a kind of almost apocalyptic nature to what he says. we're going to destroy everything. we're going to tear down, you know, these decades-long establishment. the anti-elitism seems much more strident. first, would you agree? and i know you have signed a petition supporting him. do you approve of that kind of rhetoric? >> i don't interpret it quite as you do, fareed. i would differ quite sharply from the screed with which you opened the program. i recognize donald trump's shortcomings, but i think he's as a person in the 25 years i have known him, evolved to be a responsible comparative centrist. one aspect of this campaign is very underrecognized is that mrs. clinton and ms. trump both did manage to win the nomination against people well outside to use a football expr
that anger propelled the barry goldwater movement. >> conrad, let me ask you about the goldwater analogy. the other thing that is striking about goldwater is he was, as tim said, part of the system, a parliamentarian. he was not promising to blow it up, and trump really is. if you listened to his speech on saturday, there's a kind of almost apocalyptic nature to what he says. we're going to destroy everything. we're going to tear down, you know, these decades-long establishment. the...
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Nov 25, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN2
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in which the subhead of the book is freedom is his his flight plan because goldwater was the pilot and that's his long-time campaign manager and the father of congressman john who served in congress. i kept bumping into mom's history when i was writing the book. the. the previous one i wrote years ago so much of it took place before i was either [inaudible] the planet are old enough to really understand what it meant. so i have spent a lot of time with her since she passed away at 97 through the process of writing,. >> this media saturated town and all of that it's an interesting challenge itself an interesting to see how a kid responds. the child wants to be like his or her parents or wants to be as far from them as they can, how how about you? i was in both camps. part of the book in my story is that we had a rough relationship between when i was 14 when my parents divorced and i lived with my dad till i was about 24, it was very rough and contributors on both sides, i was no picnic,. >> but license were i was surprising how much i knew? twelve and 14 we are right on the cusp. but th
in which the subhead of the book is freedom is his his flight plan because goldwater was the pilot and that's his long-time campaign manager and the father of congressman john who served in congress. i kept bumping into mom's history when i was writing the book. the. the previous one i wrote years ago so much of it took place before i was either [inaudible] the planet are old enough to really understand what it meant. so i have spent a lot of time with her since she passed away at 97 through...
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Nov 25, 2016
11/16
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goldwater was the pilot and shattuck was the longtime campaign manager, the father of congressman john shadegg who has been in congress. i kept bumping into monsters you when i was writing this book but the previous one i wrote 10 years ago was about her life because so much of it took place before i was either not on the planet are old enough to understand what it all meant. i spent a lot of time with her since she passed away in 97 through the presence of writing. >> host: raising a child in washington in this media saturated out and all that could be an interesting challenge in itself and essentially to zero to respond. even if the child wants to be like his or her parent or wants to get as far from journalism or whatever and they can't. how about you? >> guest: i was in both camps. part of the book my story with her as we had a very rough relationship between about when i was 14 and my parents divorced and i went and lived with my dad and tell others about 24, it was very wrong and, contributors on both sides. i was no picnic. >> host: a great time of life, isn't it transferred its
goldwater was the pilot and shattuck was the longtime campaign manager, the father of congressman john shadegg who has been in congress. i kept bumping into monsters you when i was writing this book but the previous one i wrote 10 years ago was about her life because so much of it took place before i was either not on the planet are old enough to understand what it all meant. i spent a lot of time with her since she passed away in 97 through the presence of writing. >> host: raising a...
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Nov 1, 2016
11/16
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KPNX
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democratic president lyndon johnson was sending a simple but devastating message about opponent barry goldwater. >> seven, six, six, >> that the arizona senator was too dangerous to handle nukes. >> it was so si point and yet he never mentions goldwater in it. >> 10, nine, eight, seven, six -- >> the daisy girl as she was known is back. >> the fear of nuclear war we would never have to have again. >> she is sharing her peers of donald trump as president. >> they are putting trump the villain at the heart of the story. >> the original ad aired only once. clinton said hazard more than that. >> now they have the internet so it will get run over and over and shared. just heard from is a independent. we could not reach her for comment today but the trump campaign did not respond to a was -- request for comment. >>> hillary clinton spent the day campaigning in ohio one of the most competitive states during this election cycle. clinton attacked trump's foreign-policy plan saying he is unfit to be president we have heard her say that before >> now they apparently want to look at emails of one of my sta
democratic president lyndon johnson was sending a simple but devastating message about opponent barry goldwater. >> seven, six, six, >> that the arizona senator was too dangerous to handle nukes. >> it was so si point and yet he never mentions goldwater in it. >> 10, nine, eight, seven, six -- >> the daisy girl as she was known is back. >> the fear of nuclear war we would never have to have again. >> she is sharing her peers of donald trump as...
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Nov 27, 2016
11/16
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campaign. >> and ran barry goldwater's campaigns. and, and so, there was a great learning experience there. i spent a lot of time working in campaigns across the country. one of my favorite was, i ran tom coburn's senate race in 2004 when he ran for the he has become a strong conservative voice in the senate, he's retiring this year. and, you know, those experiences, along with taking on the policy fights, particularly on healthcare, just gave me the experience and the knowledge to do the kinds of things that i've been doing. >> as we see the money bags in front of congress, can you win an election without a lot of dough? >> sure. ideas matter. and let me give you an example. there might have been -- some of your viewers probably remember not very long ago, just a few weeks ago, the sitting majority leader of the u.s. house, eric cantor, was beaten pretty badly in his primary against a complete no-name college professor. he spent $5 million on his campaign, the college professor spent 150,000. so it is not all about money, it's about
campaign. >> and ran barry goldwater's campaigns. and, and so, there was a great learning experience there. i spent a lot of time working in campaigns across the country. one of my favorite was, i ran tom coburn's senate race in 2004 when he ran for the he has become a strong conservative voice in the senate, he's retiring this year. and, you know, those experiences, along with taking on the policy fights, particularly on healthcare, just gave me the experience and the knowledge to do the...
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Nov 26, 2016
11/16
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tim sandefur is the vice president for litigation at the goldwater institute in phoenix, arizona. as i write in the blurb for the buck, his fourth magnificent plus countless articles, speeches and legal briefs, tim sandefur has emerged as one of america's most important up and coming political and legal theorists. a graduate of hillsdale college, the chaplain university school of law, tim served for 15 years as a litigator at the pacific legal foundation before joining goldwater. at plfd he one of many states, some of which he will discuss today. he is the author of four books, cornerstone of liberty, property rights in 21st century america co-authored with his lovely wife, christina, which came out earlier this year. the rights to earn a living, which came out in 2010; the conscience of a constitution in 2014; and now the permission society in some scholarly articles ranging from eminent domain for economic liberty and antitrust copyright slavery and the civil war and political issues in shakespeare, ancient greece and with a range of interests of those accomplishments at such an
tim sandefur is the vice president for litigation at the goldwater institute in phoenix, arizona. as i write in the blurb for the buck, his fourth magnificent plus countless articles, speeches and legal briefs, tim sandefur has emerged as one of america's most important up and coming political and legal theorists. a graduate of hillsdale college, the chaplain university school of law, tim served for 15 years as a litigator at the pacific legal foundation before joining goldwater. at plfd he one...
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Nov 8, 2016
11/16
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1964 and i was on the goldwater campaign. one of the things i keep remembering as mr. trump talks about these great crowds that come out to support him is how huge and enthusiastic the crowds were for barry goldwater. and he, too, was racing all around the country during the final days of the campaign and then got defeated in one of the most overwhelming landslides in history. i can't say that that's going to happen today, but it wouldn't surprise me if it did. everything that's been happening over these past few months has been filtered through social media. it's not a step in the right direction. we've lost a lot in terms of the american public's confidence in and faith in real journalism. and i don't see how a democracy survives if people cannot trust the objectivity of their journalists. >> absolutely, ted. as long as we're time traveling, let's do that a little bit more and go back to 1993. your friend, tom brokaw, was interviewing bill clinton and hillary clinton in the first hundred days. it was right after he had won
1964 and i was on the goldwater campaign. one of the things i keep remembering as mr. trump talks about these great crowds that come out to support him is how huge and enthusiastic the crowds were for barry goldwater. and he, too, was racing all around the country during the final days of the campaign and then got defeated in one of the most overwhelming landslides in history. i can't say that that's going to happen today, but it wouldn't surprise me if it did. everything that's been happening...
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Nov 5, 2016
11/16
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for chile we of the goldwater is a two to have a solution for these problems. would've been is a right to arm of the act which is legislation that would require state courts to impose a higher level of review than rational basis when it comes to legal challenges to restrictions on economic liberty. dean morrison is right, that when i address the test is about to be applied to whether a permit requirement is valid or not, that gets vague. the reason is because at present under the rational basis test it's basically anything goes the the government wants to impose restriction on economic liberty. it's basically free to do so with the right to earn a living act when enacted would require courts to ensure that restrictions on economic liberty protect public safety after no broader than necessary. when it comes to the fda our right to try legislation which is now law in 32 states is a first step toward rationalizing the currently irrational process of drug develop and approval by the fda. a process that takes as much as a decade and $1 billion to operate medicines t
for chile we of the goldwater is a two to have a solution for these problems. would've been is a right to arm of the act which is legislation that would require state courts to impose a higher level of review than rational basis when it comes to legal challenges to restrictions on economic liberty. dean morrison is right, that when i address the test is about to be applied to whether a permit requirement is valid or not, that gets vague. the reason is because at present under the rational basis...
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Nov 11, 2016
11/16
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call ike and nixon could call ike and he also would talk with the old guard of his party like barry goldwater. donald trump arrives, his own man, getting there by intuition. i'm worried he doesn't have anyone he can talk to as an equal on the phone. >> hugh hewitt, robert costa, our thanks to both of you gentlemen as always. thank you both so much. look at who you could run into if you're out for a walk in the woods in chappaqua, new york. margaret wrote, i heard a bit of rustling coming towards me. as i stepped into the clearing, there she was, hillary clinton and bill with their dogs doing the same thing i was. i got to talk to her and hug her and explained to her that my most proudest moment as a mother is i got to take phoebe to vote for her. i'm not one for signs, but i think i'll definitely take this one. hillary clinton spotted on a walk in the woods. the photo credit, former president bill clinton. >>> coming up after a break, a rich voice, a deep voice has been silenced. a giant in the poetry of the last half century is gone. this "the 11th hour" only on msnbc. he gets a lot of compl
call ike and nixon could call ike and he also would talk with the old guard of his party like barry goldwater. donald trump arrives, his own man, getting there by intuition. i'm worried he doesn't have anyone he can talk to as an equal on the phone. >> hugh hewitt, robert costa, our thanks to both of you gentlemen as always. thank you both so much. look at who you could run into if you're out for a walk in the woods in chappaqua, new york. margaret wrote, i heard a bit of rustling coming...
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Nov 16, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN3
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so goldwater nickels was born. i don't think we're making that big a shift in what we're doing that causes us to have to reorganize the national security apparatus of the nation. are there places where we can trim and tweak on the edges? yes, but last night i find myself describing the defense department as a diamond. it's already been cut. if you polish it, it's only going to make it brighter. and what we're doing right now is polishing the diamond. >> okay. i have a question right here. >> first of all, thanks to csis for arranging this discussion. where do allies and partners fit into this equation? >> i will just free advertise to say we have a whole panel on allies and partners say. we welcome your guidance to that panel. >> we have many of our close allies here, norway, united kingdom, japan. there are many others, and this is what we would say. the first advantage we believe we have, the competitive advantage, going back to the ai question in this world is we believe our people within the framework of what w
so goldwater nickels was born. i don't think we're making that big a shift in what we're doing that causes us to have to reorganize the national security apparatus of the nation. are there places where we can trim and tweak on the edges? yes, but last night i find myself describing the defense department as a diamond. it's already been cut. if you polish it, it's only going to make it brighter. and what we're doing right now is polishing the diamond. >> okay. i have a question right here....
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Nov 13, 2016
11/16
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utterly appalled by the goldwater supporters. theletely clear about racial signaling that is coming from the goldwater acceptance speech and he thinks it is like fascism. and he writes in his diary "this , is terrifying." "it's what i saw as a boy in germany." i think you have to remember what you care about. if you grew up in not see germany, -- in nazi germnay, and you return many years later to find most of your family dead , your priority is the german question. the totalitarian threat. that is what you care about. you definitely attach lower priority to the things that we may care about today. >> we have a hand up right here in the front. on the aisle. >> my name is dimitri. i do not have an affiliation. very interesting. thank you for your other books. i have two, quick questions. the first one to give backs off -- the first one piggybacks off of the other. how does dr. kissinger see himself as a young person? i'm sure he has never referred to himself as naive, but does he see himself as naive and idealistic? the second que
utterly appalled by the goldwater supporters. theletely clear about racial signaling that is coming from the goldwater acceptance speech and he thinks it is like fascism. and he writes in his diary "this , is terrifying." "it's what i saw as a boy in germany." i think you have to remember what you care about. if you grew up in not see germany, -- in nazi germnay, and you return many years later to find most of your family dead , your priority is the german question. the...
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Nov 13, 2016
11/16
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. >> they do it with barry goldwater. they did it to reagan. >> and hillary worked for goldwater! >> well, yeah. >> she got kicked off the watergate thing, because she was corrupt then. >> that was a trump joke. >> what was the question. >> if you can't remember the question, we move on. terry? >> thank you. >> no, i don't have a question. >> i feel like something crazy could happen right here. no, it's a good thing. but -- >> let me say one thing. trump better not listen to all the people that are making nice with him. a lot of them in his party. >> so you're vindictive? >> no, he doesn't. >> yes, he does. he's going to be the president. >> you better do everything he said. >> do you remember when obama got elected and he brought in the republican leaders and he said, i don't want to work with you, but if you don't want to work with me, adios, i'll work around you. i have a pen and a phone. i don't need you. >> i actually do not want -- >> but he's also going to be, here's the thing that donald trump will not have, that barack obama had for eight years. he will not, obviously, ha
. >> they do it with barry goldwater. they did it to reagan. >> and hillary worked for goldwater! >> well, yeah. >> she got kicked off the watergate thing, because she was corrupt then. >> that was a trump joke. >> what was the question. >> if you can't remember the question, we move on. terry? >> thank you. >> no, i don't have a question. >> i feel like something crazy could happen right here. no, it's a good thing. but -- >>...
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Nov 5, 2016
11/16
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. >> reporter: or how she and a barry goldwater after he put a mouse in the tube in the bank. she knew he was in the stall going to the toilet. she stole the pants. i happen to work in that department that was right there by the door to the restroom. he came out that door. who in the hell took my pants? >> that is a true story. >> reporter: most importantly, she will tell you how wonderful it is to celebrate her 104 years with her family and friends. >> she tells great jokes. she has a folder that thick full of jokes and she used to tell them all. she is a competitor. she has to be the best at everything and she was real strict. >> reporter: when the birthday girl has had enough, you'll up, do you want me to leave? >> you can leave now. >> reporter: marcy jones, fox 10 news. >> that is so funny. she is the life of the party. >> you want her there. >>> one bad squirrel gets loose and does some damage. where the rodent caused a major disruption. >>> where people are calling 911 >>> one california town are being overrun with angry turkeys prompting locals to calls to 911. take a
. >> reporter: or how she and a barry goldwater after he put a mouse in the tube in the bank. she knew he was in the stall going to the toilet. she stole the pants. i happen to work in that department that was right there by the door to the restroom. he came out that door. who in the hell took my pants? >> that is a true story. >> reporter: most importantly, she will tell you how wonderful it is to celebrate her 104 years with her family and friends. >> she tells great...
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Nov 22, 2016
11/16
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CSPAN3
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so goldwater-nichols was born. i don't think we're making that big a shift in what we're doing that causes us to have to reorganize the national security apparatus of the nation. are there places where we can trim and tweak on the edges? yes, but last night i find myself describing the defense department as a diamond. it's already been cut. if you polish it, it's only going to make it brighter. and what we're doing right now is polishing the diamond. >> okay. i have a question right here. >> i'm from the swedish ministry foreign affairs. first of all, thanks to csis for arranging this discussion. where do allies and partners fit into this equation? and how do we solve long term interoperability without giving away the goodies to the conventional exerts? competitors? >> i will just free advertise to say we have a whole panel on allies and partners. we welcome your guidance to that panel. >> we have many of our close allies here, norway, united kingdom, japan. there are many others, and this is what we would say. the
so goldwater-nichols was born. i don't think we're making that big a shift in what we're doing that causes us to have to reorganize the national security apparatus of the nation. are there places where we can trim and tweak on the edges? yes, but last night i find myself describing the defense department as a diamond. it's already been cut. if you polish it, it's only going to make it brighter. and what we're doing right now is polishing the diamond. >> okay. i have a question right here....
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Nov 9, 2016
11/16
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CNNW
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he's very barry goldwater, kind of strange and hawkish foreign policy talk. he's this strange combination. but usually, we see them not winning the presidency. they're usually a third party person. here, donald trump's won it. i think this is one of the big election in american history. as you guys were pointing it could be three new supreme court justices that trump might be able to put in. >> gentlemen, on that note, we have to leave it here. we have so much breaking news throughout the morning. thank you for giving us an historical perspective. to john. >> you guys were talking about it, donald did donald trump win red states but he flipped blue states as well. including at least wisconsin and pennsylvania. how did he do it. i want to bring in cnn political analyst john brownstein. working class whites. noncollege whites. donald trump won them by a bigger margin than any candidate than reagan in 1980. they should be called trump democrats, not reagan democrats. >> not only did he win noncollege white men by about 50 points. and the single discussion with t
he's very barry goldwater, kind of strange and hawkish foreign policy talk. he's this strange combination. but usually, we see them not winning the presidency. they're usually a third party person. here, donald trump's won it. i think this is one of the big election in american history. as you guys were pointing it could be three new supreme court justices that trump might be able to put in. >> gentlemen, on that note, we have to leave it here. we have so much breaking news throughout the...
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Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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we are just to the southeast of goldwater and camelback. and look behind me. we have the racers out here. of course, we have everyone dressed up like they are in the incredible event. the race is tomorrow. but there's also a lot going on tomorrow as well. in fact, i want to bring in jack here. kind of the big wig. what is going on? there is a gatsby lawn party. >> yeah, it will carry through the entire race tomorrow. great vendors. drink, food, available. wine tasting so i recommend you get out. get your vip tickets in southwest human development. so, come on out tomorrow and join us for the race >> reporter: the weather will be perfect. look at the planner tomorrow. anything you are doing, it will be perfect. 79 degrees at noon. 84 degrees is your forecast high temperature. absolutely gorgeous temperatures. coming back out here live to scottsdale. see the trophy? we are actually going to race coming up in just a bit. i have gotten my gear and i think i will be taking home this trophy, because jack and i? yeah, we will be racing. >> what? i was actually just g
we are just to the southeast of goldwater and camelback. and look behind me. we have the racers out here. of course, we have everyone dressed up like they are in the incredible event. the race is tomorrow. but there's also a lot going on tomorrow as well. in fact, i want to bring in jack here. kind of the big wig. what is going on? there is a gatsby lawn party. >> yeah, it will carry through the entire race tomorrow. great vendors. drink, food, available. wine tasting so i recommend you...
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Nov 13, 2016
11/16
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like william buckley junior, national review magazine and an initial modest success in backing barry goldwater in the presidential campaign of 1964 although he was a colossal loser. but then people say that tradition continued in some way, founded studies with ronald reagan. you see the conservative movement take up more so with reagan and others. evangelicals were outliers for much of that political history. in fact, if you look at the history of evangelical politics, even though ethnically varied ties between evangelicals and republican party going back to abraham lincoln, the political instincts of evangelicals as they read it and i have grown up so i know something of the background is much more moralistic and constitutional. the conservatives have 1950s were very much could turn about the constitution and the limits on government although they wanted a strong foreign policy to oppose communist. evangelical is invariably have with their politics through more lands whether something is good or bad, supports homeliness enriches us a rather detract from that or some notions of justice. conser
like william buckley junior, national review magazine and an initial modest success in backing barry goldwater in the presidential campaign of 1964 although he was a colossal loser. but then people say that tradition continued in some way, founded studies with ronald reagan. you see the conservative movement take up more so with reagan and others. evangelicals were outliers for much of that political history. in fact, if you look at the history of evangelical politics, even though ethnically...
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Nov 10, 2016
11/16
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i was there for the goldwater presidential campaign in 1964 with launched the conservative movement that i was there for ronald reagan's 1980 landslide victory. there was a great conservative victory but not a rejection of america's ruling class. yesterday's election results were the opening battle of an american political revolution from the presidency to the congress to the federal courts in the states. president obama said his policies were on the ballot yesterday and the american people said they want to repeal those policies, his legacy and his agenda. the bush wing of the republican party is dead and was buried yesterday by the american people. the old republican coalition of republican establishment as a senior partner in the grassroots constitutional conservatives and a junior partner is dead. america's new governing coalition with the trump populist in the grassroots constitutional conservatives. something else that died yesterday was gridlock. be careful what you ask for, liberals. you wanted and into good luck and yesterday the american people gave us an end to good luck in wa
i was there for the goldwater presidential campaign in 1964 with launched the conservative movement that i was there for ronald reagan's 1980 landslide victory. there was a great conservative victory but not a rejection of america's ruling class. yesterday's election results were the opening battle of an american political revolution from the presidency to the congress to the federal courts in the states. president obama said his policies were on the ballot yesterday and the american people...
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Nov 11, 2016
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call ike and nixon could call ike and he also would talk with the old guard of his party like barry goldwater. donald trump arrives, his own man, getting there by intuition. i'm worried he doesn't have anyone he can talk to as an equal on the phone. >> hugh hewitt, robert costa, our thanks to both of you gentlemen as always. look at who you could run into if you're out for a walk in the woods in chappaqua, new york. margaret wrote, i heard a bit of rustling coming towards me. as i stepped into the clearing, there she was, hillary clinton and her husband with her dogs doing the same thing i was. i got to talk to her and hug her and explained to her that my most proudest moment as a mother is i got to do the same thing with phoebe with me. coming up after a break, a rich voice, a deep voice has been silenced. a giant in the poetry of the last half century is gone. this "the 11th hour" only on msnbc. today, there's a new option. introducing drug-free aleve direct therapy. a tens device with high intensity power that uses technology once only available in doctors' offices. its wireless remote let
call ike and nixon could call ike and he also would talk with the old guard of his party like barry goldwater. donald trump arrives, his own man, getting there by intuition. i'm worried he doesn't have anyone he can talk to as an equal on the phone. >> hugh hewitt, robert costa, our thanks to both of you gentlemen as always. look at who you could run into if you're out for a walk in the woods in chappaqua, new york. margaret wrote, i heard a bit of rustling coming towards me. as i stepped...
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Nov 12, 2016
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i was there for the goldwater presidential campaign in 1964 with launched the conservative movement. i was there for ronald reagan's 1980 landslide victory. there was a great conservative victory but not a rejection of america's ruling class. yesterday's election results were the opening battle of an american political revolution from the presidency, to the congress, to the federal courts, and the states. president obama said his policies were on the ballot yesterday and the american people said they want to repeal those policies, his legacy, and his agenda. the bush wing of the republican party is dead and was buried yesterday by the american people. the old republican coalition of republican establishment as a senior partner in the grassroots constitutional conservatives and s a junior partner is dead. america's new governing coalition with the trump populist in the grassroots constitutional conservatives. something else that died yesterday was gridlock. be careful what you ask for, liberals. you wanted an end to good luck -- gridlock and yesterday the , american people gave us an
i was there for the goldwater presidential campaign in 1964 with launched the conservative movement. i was there for ronald reagan's 1980 landslide victory. there was a great conservative victory but not a rejection of america's ruling class. yesterday's election results were the opening battle of an american political revolution from the presidency, to the congress, to the federal courts, and the states. president obama said his policies were on the ballot yesterday and the american people...
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Nov 1, 2016
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barry goldwater, 1964, daisy. >> we once had a charming candidate named barry goldwater, a libertarian who everybody liked. he was a little unsteady on that issue. but people liked the guy. the likability factor is definitely in trouble right now. >> here's my worry. what is the -- remember that documentary about nuclear war and it was called "the day after," i think. what is the landscape of america going to look like the day after, after a campaign where we can't decide whether the ending is going to be nuclear war or groping women. >> watch the show tonight. i have a whole thing for that. it was jason robarts, "the day after." i know movies. ruth marcus, hugh hewitt, and perry -- what do you want the topic to be if you're for clinton? >> i'm not sure people are going to be totally convinced by additional women, so i think you've got to go for war. >> i think they're both accusing each other of blowing up the universe, which is an amazing -- how do you go beyond that? >>> coming up, the state of the race with one week to go, polls are tightening and nerves are fraying, as we've been
barry goldwater, 1964, daisy. >> we once had a charming candidate named barry goldwater, a libertarian who everybody liked. he was a little unsteady on that issue. but people liked the guy. the likability factor is definitely in trouble right now. >> here's my worry. what is the -- remember that documentary about nuclear war and it was called "the day after," i think. what is the landscape of america going to look like the day after, after a campaign where we can't decide...
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donald trump, his comments about hispanics possibly harming the party's relationship, the same way goldwater did with african-americans. do you still share those concerns? you support his central policy idea to build a wall? senator mcconnell: i am not going to relitigate the events of the past. we have a new president. i would like to see him get off on a positive start. i think we should look forward, not backward, relitigate the various debates we had internally and with the democrats. >> what about the wall? senator mcconnell: we will be talking to the president about his agenda. border security is important. i think our democrat friends have done a good job of that. achieving border security is something that ought to be high on the list. i want to try to achieve border security in whatever way is the most effective. senator, do the election to the warnal an end on coal? what does that mean for coal jobs in kentucky? isator mcconnell: the war not a result of any legislation we have passed. the president will take a look at the unilateral actions the president took through executive orde
donald trump, his comments about hispanics possibly harming the party's relationship, the same way goldwater did with african-americans. do you still share those concerns? you support his central policy idea to build a wall? senator mcconnell: i am not going to relitigate the events of the past. we have a new president. i would like to see him get off on a positive start. i think we should look forward, not backward, relitigate the various debates we had internally and with the democrats....
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Nov 10, 2016
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donald trump, his comments about hispanics possibly harming the party's relationship, the same way goldwater did with african-americans. the morning after do you still , share those concerns? number two, do you support his central policy idea to build a wall? senator mcconnell: i am not going to relitigate the events of the past. we have a new president. i would like to see him get off on a positive start. i think we should look forward, not backward, relitigate the various debates we had internally and with the democrats. >> what about the wall? senator mcconnell: we will be talking to the president about his agenda. border security is important. i think our democrat friends realize we have not done a good job of that. achieving border security is something that ought to be high on the list. i want to try to achieve border security in whatever way is the most effective. >> senator, do the election results signal an end to the war on coal? how does that affect your agenda in the next congress, and what does that mean for coal jobs in kentucky? senator mcconnell: the war is not a result of an
donald trump, his comments about hispanics possibly harming the party's relationship, the same way goldwater did with african-americans. the morning after do you still , share those concerns? number two, do you support his central policy idea to build a wall? senator mcconnell: i am not going to relitigate the events of the past. we have a new president. i would like to see him get off on a positive start. i think we should look forward, not backward, relitigate the various debates we had...
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Nov 9, 2016
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molly: barry goldwater. curtis: exactly. at thahat time, the traditional south was democratic. wasas the north that republican. the red states were democrat, the blue states were republican. lyndon johnson betrayed them, the seven democrats, when he signed the civil rights bill and the voting rights act. the traditional republicans, who were out of office -- basically richard nixon -- began to appeal to those voters. that was the beginning of what we called dog whistle politics, saying that we are going to restore your dignity, we will give back your states' rights. you have to realize, this is after 200 something years of slavery, after jim crow. jim crow, only in 1954. slowly over the years, republicans have been telling these people, we will give your dignity back. -- you have been told that your problem is because of the blacks, the immigrants, people of different religions, etc. so this has been cooking in the oven for a number of years. ronald reagan came in with his neoliberal politics that decimated the american economy, destroying households, destroying incomes. people
molly: barry goldwater. curtis: exactly. at thahat time, the traditional south was democratic. wasas the north that republican. the red states were democrat, the blue states were republican. lyndon johnson betrayed them, the seven democrats, when he signed the civil rights bill and the voting rights act. the traditional republicans, who were out of office -- basically richard nixon -- began to appeal to those voters. that was the beginning of what we called dog whistle politics, saying that we...
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chairman barry goldwater, certainly no raving liberal, that was the legislation that put into place the promotion procedures for our generals. we don't just fire generals. you can fire the chairman of the joint chief, he's a presidential appointee, but there's a whole progression. it would -- we've seen generals replaced, certainly under president obama. we've seen what happened at various times. but you don't just wholesale remove all of the flag officers. they go through an orderly promotion process. chris jansing, you're there at the white house. we've seen the still frame from this video. we're about to say it played back. but it's quite extraordinary. what we're watching today at the white house. >> reporter: i have to say, andrea, when that first still came up, i took a little breath of air in. as you and i know, as part of that pool, when you go into the oval office and you see those high-back chairs around the fireplace, a world leader is sitting in the other chair opposite the president of the united states. so, this is the first opportunity that we have had to see donald t
chairman barry goldwater, certainly no raving liberal, that was the legislation that put into place the promotion procedures for our generals. we don't just fire generals. you can fire the chairman of the joint chief, he's a presidential appointee, but there's a whole progression. it would -- we've seen generals replaced, certainly under president obama. we've seen what happened at various times. but you don't just wholesale remove all of the flag officers. they go through an orderly promotion...
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Nov 13, 2016
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hispanics and potentially harming the republican party's relationship with hispanics similar to the way goldwater did with african americans. after last night, do you still share those concerns? do you still have those concerns, number one? number two, do you support a central policy idea to build the wall on the border with mexico? >> i'm not going to go back and relit gate the eevebts of the past. we have a new president. i would like him to get off on a positive start. and i think we should look forward and not backward and kind of rehash and relate gate the >> what about the wall? senator mcconnell: we will be talking to the president about his agenda. border security is important. i think our democrat friends have done a good job of that. achieving border security is something that ought to be high on the list. i want to try to achieve border security in whatever way is the most effective. >> senator, do the election results signal an end to the war on coal? if so, how does that affect your agenda of the next congress jago -- congress?. what does that mean for coal jobs in kentucky? senator
hispanics and potentially harming the republican party's relationship with hispanics similar to the way goldwater did with african americans. after last night, do you still share those concerns? do you still have those concerns, number one? number two, do you support a central policy idea to build the wall on the border with mexico? >> i'm not going to go back and relit gate the eevebts of the past. we have a new president. i would like him to get off on a positive start. and i think we...
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Nov 10, 2016
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comments about hispanics potentially harming the party's relationship with hispanics similar to the way goldwater did with african-americans. do you still share those concerns? do you still have those concerns, or one? -- number one? number two, do you support his central policy idea to build a wall? senator mcconnell: i am not going to relitigate the events of the past. we have a new president. i would like to see him get off on a positive start. and i think we should look forward, not backward, kind of rehash and relitigate the various debates we had internally and with the democrats over the past year. >> what about the wall? senator mcconnell: we will be talking to the president about his agenda. border security is important. i think even our democratic friends realize we have not done a very good job of that. achieving border security is something that ought to be high on the list. >> personal preference on the wall? senator mcconnell: i want to try to achieve border security in whatever way is the most effective. >> senator, do the election results signal an end to the war on coal? and if s
comments about hispanics potentially harming the party's relationship with hispanics similar to the way goldwater did with african-americans. do you still share those concerns? do you still have those concerns, or one? -- number one? number two, do you support his central policy idea to build a wall? senator mcconnell: i am not going to relitigate the events of the past. we have a new president. i would like to see him get off on a positive start. and i think we should look forward, not...
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of whatmpletely clear is coming from the goldwater acceptance speech and he thinks it is like fascism. he writes in his diary, "this is terrifying." this is what i saw as a boy in germany. i think you have to remember what you care about. if you grew up in not see nazi germnay,n and you return many years later to find most of your family dead then that is the authority that you care about. you attach lower priority to the things that we may care about today. >> we have a hand up right here in the front. >> my name is dimitri. i do not have an affiliation. i have two, quick questions. the first one to give backs off the other one. how does dr. kissinger see himself as a young person? does he see himself as naive and idealistic? the second question is about the united nations. how does he see them as a young person? as he have high hopes? how does it change? niall: i think it is fair to say that his view now of the book is that it is an accurate account of his young life. there are no major interpretations in it that he refutes. on the united nations, it is interesting that from very ea
of whatmpletely clear is coming from the goldwater acceptance speech and he thinks it is like fascism. he writes in his diary, "this is terrifying." this is what i saw as a boy in germany. i think you have to remember what you care about. if you grew up in not see nazi germnay,n and you return many years later to find most of your family dead then that is the authority that you care about. you attach lower priority to the things that we may care about today. >> we have a hand up...
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i was there for the goldwater presidential campaign in 1964 which launched the conservative movement. i was there for ronald reagan in 1980, the landslide election victory. it was a great conservative victory but not a rejection of the voting class. yesterday's results was the americanattle of an political revolution from the presidency to the congress, to the federal courts, and the states. president obama said his policies were on the ballot the americand people said they want to repeal those policies, his legacy, and his agenda. the bush wing of the republican party is dead and buried yesterday by the american people. the old republican coalition of the republican establishment is the senior partner in the grassroots constitutional conservatives as the junior partner is dead. america's new governing and a trump populist in the constitutional conservatives. something else that died yesterday was gridlock. be careful what you ask for. you wanted an end to gridlock and yesterday, the american people gave us an and to gridlock in washington. the greatest impediment to -- last night,ca
i was there for the goldwater presidential campaign in 1964 which launched the conservative movement. i was there for ronald reagan in 1980, the landslide election victory. it was a great conservative victory but not a rejection of the voting class. yesterday's results was the americanattle of an political revolution from the presidency to the congress, to the federal courts, and the states. president obama said his policies were on the ballot the americand people said they want to repeal those...
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goldwater candidacy gets less than 40% of the vote. they are going to disappear. they won five of the next six presidential elections. it's a little premature to write the obituaries for the world's oldest political party. >> there was some parts that just did not hear what was happening, obviously. i talked to senator jim webb as he was getting ready to run for president. this is part of the interview. >> who would be the represented party for the working people in the country? that has the traditional role of the democratic party. the people who have no voice in the quarters of power could count on the democrat iblg party to be talking about those issues, economic fairness issues particularly. >> you said democrats could do a better job with white working people. but you concede that group has gone to the gop. >> i agree. this is a values-centered culture. this is a culture that does not envy wealth. it's a culture heavy on personal honor, military service. >> it's like they didn't listen to him at all. >> you know what's interesting is hillary didn't listen to
goldwater candidacy gets less than 40% of the vote. they are going to disappear. they won five of the next six presidential elections. it's a little premature to write the obituaries for the world's oldest political party. >> there was some parts that just did not hear what was happening, obviously. i talked to senator jim webb as he was getting ready to run for president. this is part of the interview. >> who would be the represented party for the working people in the country?...
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this goes back to an ad that lyndon johnson, wanting to warn the country when barry goldwater said, in terms of our relationship with the soviet union at the time, that maybe we should just lob a nuke into the men's room of the kremlin. anyhow, goldwater picked it up said, president johnson picked it up, this is the guy you want with his finger on the nuclear button? hardly, right? and the ad depick ad little girl picking a daisy, he loves me, he loves me not, little daisies became famous as the daisy ad. by the way it ran once. >> really? >> it ran once. it changed, it decided that election. it was such a powerful ad, such an impact. it also created such controversy that johnson ran it once, took it down but it is a little reprise here yesterday from the clinton campaign. here's what it sounds like. >> this is me in 1964. the fear of nuclear war we had as children i never thought our children would ever have to deal with that again. to see that coming forward in this election is really scary. >> trump asked three times -- >> three times, why can't we use nuclear weapons. >> i want to
this goes back to an ad that lyndon johnson, wanting to warn the country when barry goldwater said, in terms of our relationship with the soviet union at the time, that maybe we should just lob a nuke into the men's room of the kremlin. anyhow, goldwater picked it up said, president johnson picked it up, this is the guy you want with his finger on the nuclear button? hardly, right? and the ad depick ad little girl picking a daisy, he loves me, he loves me not, little daisies became famous as...
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canton central catholic wins 24- 14 and we'll have a rematch against goldwater in the state finals. >>> here's news on your sunday morning. having a couple of glasses of wine could be good for your health. [ applause ] >> but there's a caveat. more could have the opposite effect. that is according to a review of studies published in bmc medicine. the review found that those who had one or two a day reduced risk of stroke by 8% but more, increased risk of stroke. as for those people who don't >>> divorce rates in the u.s. are plunging to a 35-year low. it's hard to say exactly why but factors could include the aging population, changing gender roles or just because not many people are getting married. some americans are foregoing marriage to stay single and live alone or co-habitat with partners without tying the knot. the new data from the national center for family and marriage research at bowling green state university. >>> coming up -- cleveland courts will new bail system. what will change for those who will be in court soon. and we're just a day away from driverless vehicles maki
canton central catholic wins 24- 14 and we'll have a rematch against goldwater in the state finals. >>> here's news on your sunday morning. having a couple of glasses of wine could be good for your health. [ applause ] >> but there's a caveat. more could have the opposite effect. that is according to a review of studies published in bmc medicine. the review found that those who had one or two a day reduced risk of stroke by 8% but more, increased risk of stroke. as for those...
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goldwater. and then we went away to college. >> in the fall of 1965, hillary arrived at wellesley college, an elite, all-women's school outside boston. >> it was a huge change because suddenly she was at wellesley and hillary's upbringing had been very sheltered compared to these girls. >> when janet hill arrived at wellesley that same fall, she, too, felt a fish out of water and quickly bonded with hillary. >> i found her to be friendly and easy to get along with. >> when hillary was at wellesley college, she was very popular and it was popularity that results from exercising leadership and being successful at exercising leadership. >> alan schechter was hillary's political science professor and faculty adviser. >> she was very interested in the major issues of the era, issues of race, gender, poverty. >> issues that would soon push hillary to abandon her republican roots and begin leading the way for change. >> she was no doubt the leader of not just the senior class but the entire college. >>
goldwater. and then we went away to college. >> in the fall of 1965, hillary arrived at wellesley college, an elite, all-women's school outside boston. >> it was a huge change because suddenly she was at wellesley and hillary's upbringing had been very sheltered compared to these girls. >> when janet hill arrived at wellesley that same fall, she, too, felt a fish out of water and quickly bonded with hillary. >> i found her to be friendly and easy to get along with....
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. >> she and i were goldwater girls together in park ridge and set up the goldwater headquarters. and then we went away to college. >> in the fall of 1965, hillary arrived at wellesley college, an elite, all-women's school outside boston. >> it was a huge change because suddenly she was at wellesley and hillary's upbringing had been very sheltered compared to these girls. >> when janet hill arrived at wellesley that same fall, she, too, felt a fish out of water and quickly bonded with hillary. >> i found her to be friendly and easy to get along with. >> when hillary was at wellesley college, she was very popular and it was popularity that results from exercising leadership and being successful at exercising leadership. >> alan schechter was hillary's political science professor and faculty adviser. >> she was very interested in the major issues of the era, issues of race, gender, poverty. >> issues that would soon push hillary to abandon her republican roots and begin leading the way for change. >> she was no doubt the leader of not just the senior class but the entire college. >>
. >> she and i were goldwater girls together in park ridge and set up the goldwater headquarters. and then we went away to college. >> in the fall of 1965, hillary arrived at wellesley college, an elite, all-women's school outside boston. >> it was a huge change because suddenly she was at wellesley and hillary's upbringing had been very sheltered compared to these girls. >> when janet hill arrived at wellesley that same fall, she, too, felt a fish out of water and...
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. >> but they did it with barry goldwater. they did it to him. reagan was the only one -- >> and hillary worked for gold water. >> well, yeah. she got kicked off the watergate thing, because she was too corrupt for that. what was the question? >> that was a trump joke from his speech. >> if you can't remember the question, we move on. >> terry? >> thank you. >> i don't have a question. >> i feel like something crazy could happen right here. >> it's a good thing. >> but let me say one better not listen to -- all the people that are making nice with him. a lot of them. >> you're vindictive. >> you have to. he's going to be the president. >> do you remember -- do you remember -- you better do everything he says he's going to do. he better do everything. we will do it all. >> do you remember when obama got elected and he brought in the republican leaders and he said, y'all want to work with us, but if you don't want to work with me, adios, i've got a pen and a phone, i don't need you. >> that's exactly what he needs to do. >> but here's the thing tha
. >> but they did it with barry goldwater. they did it to him. reagan was the only one -- >> and hillary worked for gold water. >> well, yeah. she got kicked off the watergate thing, because she was too corrupt for that. what was the question? >> that was a trump joke from his speech. >> if you can't remember the question, we move on. >> terry? >> thank you. >> i don't have a question. >> i feel like something crazy could happen right here....
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we have a letter to him from barry goldwater, a famous conservative from arizona. also pictures of him shaking hands with jimmy carter, who as we know, beat him for the democratic nomination in 1976. we have pictures of horace udall shaking -- morris udall shaking hands with john f. kennedy and ronald reagan. gabby giffords served from 2007 known2, perhaps best nationally as the survivor of the nest sheathing in tucson on january 8 -- mass shooting in tucson on january 8, 2011. we have a simple -- a sample. we are seeing some of her work with the nasa team. we have her work with nancy pelosi and her husband mark kelly. when we see congressional papers of gabrielle giffords, what is different from other papers is that it documents not only her work in congress, but her recovery as well as the aftermath of the mass shooting. her collection is a lot of get well cards sent not just locally, but all over the country. many were sent from school kids, famous people, people from all over the world. here we have a shoe that was sent to her, one of the most unusual items in
we have a letter to him from barry goldwater, a famous conservative from arizona. also pictures of him shaking hands with jimmy carter, who as we know, beat him for the democratic nomination in 1976. we have pictures of horace udall shaking -- morris udall shaking hands with john f. kennedy and ronald reagan. gabby giffords served from 2007 known2, perhaps best nationally as the survivor of the nest sheathing in tucson on january 8 -- mass shooting in tucson on january 8, 2011. we have a simple...
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happened in this trump campaign, you know, in the way that a certain kind of conservative found the goldwater campaign was lost but they learned how to organize and sort of enter politics, that this kind of represents that for them. >> yeah, i think that they see right now a real opportunity with donald trump taking their language to the mainstream, to the mainstream political discourse. when you see donald trump talking on cable news every day on the way they talk, on their radio shows, on twitter or on their reddit forums, it's very validating for them. >> it's been hard to distinguish when you deal with these what i call nazi frogs on twitter and these various trolls, but then you see someone at a trump event using the word lugenpressa, which is the nazi term for lying press. you think so yourself, man, i guess there are really people out there like who are doing that. >> maybe it's not all about economic disenfranchisement. >> maybe not just a bunch of bots or weirdos on twitter. there's actual human beings in the real world doing this. >> there are real people who believe this sort of st
happened in this trump campaign, you know, in the way that a certain kind of conservative found the goldwater campaign was lost but they learned how to organize and sort of enter politics, that this kind of represents that for them. >> yeah, i think that they see right now a real opportunity with donald trump taking their language to the mainstream, to the mainstream political discourse. when you see donald trump talking on cable news every day on the way they talk, on their radio shows,...
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after having voted for fdr four times, campaigned for harry truman and finally making the switch for goldwater. the second is richard nixon's insight that a shift from economic populism to cultural populism would help to bring working-class white voters away from the working-class cities and my native south. we still live in a culturally populous stage. >> thank you very much. ginsburg, counselor, thanks. we will talk as our coverage continues. thank you to our guests on the. >>> coming up, cubs nation celebrates a championship. history was made eight decades ago. y's critical, but i really... ...need a sick day. dads don't take sick days. dads take dayquil severe: the... ...non-drowsy, coughing, aching, fever, sore throat, stuffy... ...head, no sick days medicine. >>> this is what 108 years of pent up welcome home looks like. grant park in chicago today with crowd-size estimates at one point hovering around 5 million souls, some north of that number according to local tv coverage. that would make it the seventh largest gathering of people in recorded modern human history, if you can believe i
after having voted for fdr four times, campaigned for harry truman and finally making the switch for goldwater. the second is richard nixon's insight that a shift from economic populism to cultural populism would help to bring working-class white voters away from the working-class cities and my native south. we still live in a culturally populous stage. >> thank you very much. ginsburg, counselor, thanks. we will talk as our coverage continues. thank you to our guests on the. >>>...
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Nov 1, 2016
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you heard the tagline, it was the same tagline we had in 1964 where lgb was running against goldwater who had advocated the use of tactical nuclear weapons. this has been a theme that the clinton campaign has run ads on before. -- heard her announcement her acceptance speech, a man you can date with the tweet is not a man you could trust with nuclear weapons. another actor from that campaign also do in ad for clinton to the confessions of a republican ad. i just found this out yesterday, it was the same guy who we see 50 years later talking about how , as a disconcerted republican by seeing some of the things trump had said and done. host: let's head back to 1964 to remind viewers of that famous ad. six2, three, 4, 5, seven, , eight, nine, nine. 7, 6, 5, or, three, two, one. stakes to makee a world in which all of god's children can live. other, either loved each or we must i. >>. president johnson on november third. the stakes are too high for you to stay home. host: we want to hear from our viewers which ads have impacted you. political communications center. democrats can call in.
you heard the tagline, it was the same tagline we had in 1964 where lgb was running against goldwater who had advocated the use of tactical nuclear weapons. this has been a theme that the clinton campaign has run ads on before. -- heard her announcement her acceptance speech, a man you can date with the tweet is not a man you could trust with nuclear weapons. another actor from that campaign also do in ad for clinton to the confessions of a republican ad. i just found this out yesterday, it was...
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Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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here's a letter to him from very goldwater, a famous conservative from arizona. here he is shaking hands with jimmy carter, who as we know beat him to the democratic nomination. ofalso have pictures here him shaking pictures with john f. kennedy and ronald reagan. gabrielle giffords was a congressperson from arizona who 2007 until 2012. she is perhaps best known of anally as the survivor mass shooting that took place here in tucson on january 8, 2011. here we have a representative sample from congresswoman gabrielle giffords. we also have a picture of her with lindsay pelosi. what makes her is different than our other congressional papers is that it's not just her working congress, but it also documents or recovery, as well as the aftermath of the mass shooting. collection has lots of get well cards sent not as locally, but from all over the country. many of them were sent by schoolkids, famous people, people from all over the world. here we have a shoe that was sent to her. one of the most unusual items in the collection. it's basically a get well card that was
here's a letter to him from very goldwater, a famous conservative from arizona. here he is shaking hands with jimmy carter, who as we know beat him to the democratic nomination. ofalso have pictures here him shaking pictures with john f. kennedy and ronald reagan. gabrielle giffords was a congressperson from arizona who 2007 until 2012. she is perhaps best known of anally as the survivor mass shooting that took place here in tucson on january 8, 2011. here we have a representative sample from...
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Nov 9, 2016
11/16
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senator john mccain has a seat previously held by barry goldwater. he is now on his way for a sixth term, winning easily, confirming with the polls of said all along, a 10-point lead in the arizona senate race. in florida, marco rubio going back to a second term after his failed presidential bid. he announced in this building that he was going to seek a second term. in missouri, jason kander putting up a tough fight, but looking at results in missouri, senator roy blunt, looks like he is heading to another term with about 64% of the vote. in nevada, this is a state where republicans hope to pick up, the seat of senator harry reid, the democratic leader who is stepping down. congressman joe heck with 66% of the vote. o with a 28.7%. in new hampshire, 67% of the vote for kelly ayotte. .aggie hassan at 46% in pennsylvania, katie mcginty is holding onto a never a narrow lead with about 77% of the vote. reporting in the keystone state, katie mckenzie is just over 49%. is the manager and editor in chief for the hell newspaper -- for the hill newspaper. boy
senator john mccain has a seat previously held by barry goldwater. he is now on his way for a sixth term, winning easily, confirming with the polls of said all along, a 10-point lead in the arizona senate race. in florida, marco rubio going back to a second term after his failed presidential bid. he announced in this building that he was going to seek a second term. in missouri, jason kander putting up a tough fight, but looking at results in missouri, senator roy blunt, looks like he is...
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Nov 2, 2016
11/16
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starting in 1964 pugh research started polling them, 94% who voted for lyndon johnson over barry goldwater. we know it is the case. what makes this different is that we've never seen this level of activism before. that grows out of not any particular love for mrs. clinton, they don't like her, but they like she is a liberal and -- >> and they hate trump. >> there's a hatred and fear of trump because if he comes in he will smash the existing order and that includes the power and influence of the mainstream media. >> larry, to pick up on that and you have talked over the years about media bias, but he blows up the republican establishment, the democratic establishment, the media establishment, the globalist establishment. it is shattered because he doesn't care about the old order anymore. >> he is not behold ento anybody. one of the things about donald trump is he's been able to sell finance for the most part his own campaign. add to that study, sean, the wikileaks revelation that "the washington post" is doing an article about john podesta, the chair of the hillary clinton campaign, underc
starting in 1964 pugh research started polling them, 94% who voted for lyndon johnson over barry goldwater. we know it is the case. what makes this different is that we've never seen this level of activism before. that grows out of not any particular love for mrs. clinton, they don't like her, but they like she is a liberal and -- >> and they hate trump. >> there's a hatred and fear of trump because if he comes in he will smash the existing order and that includes the power and...
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i think the story is how trump took barry goldwater right morphed it with segregatioist george wallace views and grabbled nafta, wallace won 90% in 1992 against and a half at that. you're seeing the anti-nafta sentiment trump has been run in ohio, michigan and wisconsin. >> trevor: scary and we are now part of history. >> thank you. >> trevor: douglas brinkley, everybody. we'll ♪ (cat meows) ♪ (snap) ♪ (cat meows) sheba® perfect portions™. what cats want™ hey thank you. is that the famous food critic miles von gaston? perfect thin and crispy. freshly roasted chipotle peppers. hmm, delicious mild smokey taste. he knows this isn't a restaurant right? four stars for the chips. the service not so much. this season, you could be on the field for super bowl 51, and win other unreal experiences and awesome prizes from the nfl, madden 17 and xbox. only at pepsiandtostitos.com ( cheers and applause ) >> trevor: welcome back to "the daily show." we are live and covering the election. the last few weeks, a lot of people have been talking about a rigged election. now i wish they were ri
i think the story is how trump took barry goldwater right morphed it with segregatioist george wallace views and grabbled nafta, wallace won 90% in 1992 against and a half at that. you're seeing the anti-nafta sentiment trump has been run in ohio, michigan and wisconsin. >> trevor: scary and we are now part of history. >> thank you. >> trevor: douglas brinkley, everybody. we'll ♪ (cat meows) ♪ (snap) ♪ (cat meows) sheba® perfect portions™. what cats want™ hey thank...
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Nov 13, 2016
11/16
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challenge for him in some ways than with president reagan or if you want to go further towards barry goldwater for this reason. they were conservatives and accepted as conservatives. when they deviated from the conservatism if you talk about president reagan, they were making a conscious deviation from a set of principles or set of ideologies that they espoused and supporters understood them to have. in the case of donald trump, he's not a idealogical conservative. all he has to go on is promises he made during the campaign. if they see him as the ava tar going forward, maybe they'll cut him some slack. if it was about the issues, he'll have a fairly short honeymoon. >> thanks so much, we'll see you back a little bit later on in the hour. thank you so much for now. president-elect donald trump admits social media helped him win and says he will now restrain himselves. already, he's not holding back. we'll discuss that next. one smart choice leads to the next. ♪ the new 2017 ford fusion is here. it's the beauty of a well-made choice. ♪ youthat's why you drink ensure. sidelined. with 9 grams
challenge for him in some ways than with president reagan or if you want to go further towards barry goldwater for this reason. they were conservatives and accepted as conservatives. when they deviated from the conservatism if you talk about president reagan, they were making a conscious deviation from a set of principles or set of ideologies that they espoused and supporters understood them to have. in the case of donald trump, he's not a idealogical conservative. all he has to go on is...
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Nov 7, 2016
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goldwater at the time and mr. trump at this time as unfit to command the nuclear arsenal. did your opinion of super pacs change? >> no, they haven't changed at all. i think the nuclear issue transcends all other issues. because if a president miscalculates, misreads the intent of the enemy, doesn't have the leadership or the capacity to diffuse a crisis diplomatically before it gets to be at the nuclear level, then it doesn't make a difference what that person's position is on abortion or campaign finance reform or immigration. i really think that at -- because if the war happens, we're all toast, right? and i really think that the most important question citizens ask themselves or herself before they vote for president is who do i trust with my life? and, you know, john mccain and mitt romney, if either one of them had won, i was for obama, but i would have trusted them with my life. i will not trust donald trump with my life. i don't think he's got the ability or the experience to diffuse a crisis and, second -- >> michelle here, i'm sorry to interrupt you, but i think a
goldwater at the time and mr. trump at this time as unfit to command the nuclear arsenal. did your opinion of super pacs change? >> no, they haven't changed at all. i think the nuclear issue transcends all other issues. because if a president miscalculates, misreads the intent of the enemy, doesn't have the leadership or the capacity to diffuse a crisis diplomatically before it gets to be at the nuclear level, then it doesn't make a difference what that person's position is on abortion or...
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Nov 11, 2016
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goldwater candidacy gets less than 40% of the vote. they are going to disappear. they won five of the next six presidential elections. it's a little premature to write the obituaries for the world's oldest political party. >> there was some parts that just did not hear what was happening, obviously. i talked to senator jim webb as he was getting ready to run for president. this is part of the interview. >> who would be the represented party for the working people in the country? that has the traditional role of the democratic party. the people who have no voice in the quarters of power could count on the democrat iblg party to be talking about those issues, economic fairness issues particularly. >> you said democrats could do a better job with white working people. but you concede that group has gone to the gop. >> i agree. this is a values-centered culture. this is a culture that does not envy wealth. it's a culture heavy on personal honor, military service. >> it's like they didn't listen to him at all. >> you know what's interesting is hillary didn't listen to
goldwater candidacy gets less than 40% of the vote. they are going to disappear. they won five of the next six presidential elections. it's a little premature to write the obituaries for the world's oldest political party. >> there was some parts that just did not hear what was happening, obviously. i talked to senator jim webb as he was getting ready to run for president. this is part of the interview. >> who would be the represented party for the working people in the country?...
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Nov 7, 2016
11/16
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. >> but on the other question, i think of barry goldwater. he gets killed in 1964. it goes poorly and then rond reagan comes on next with a cleaner look, and he'll be president in 1980. that's one thing that can happen. if donald trump is done, but someone continues with his message in a more politically astute way. >> quickly, laura, regardless of who wins does comey serve until 2023? >> he has a tenure that's intended to outlast the political sphere. we want to make sure the fbi is not political. when he raised the red flag ten days before and lowered it two days before the election, it just really undermined his integrity, and the fbi in general. >> i'd read that book, the book he writes after this. thank you guys. lau laura, sunlen, bryan, julian, lonnie. you are troopers. donald trump's campaign manager was on cnn a short time ago. she spoke with anderson cooper. we want to play you part of their conversation, especially this. accusations from officials in the republican party that early voting in some states is being run in a way that is unfair to donald trump
. >> but on the other question, i think of barry goldwater. he gets killed in 1964. it goes poorly and then rond reagan comes on next with a cleaner look, and he'll be president in 1980. that's one thing that can happen. if donald trump is done, but someone continues with his message in a more politically astute way. >> quickly, laura, regardless of who wins does comey serve until 2023? >> he has a tenure that's intended to outlast the political sphere. we want to make sure...