America's Great Divide: Steve Bannon, 1st Interview | FRONTLINE
Steve Bannon is a media executive and political strategist. He served as executive chairman of Breitbart News, as an adviser to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, and later as chief strategist in the Trump White House.
Bannon's candid interview was conducted with FRONTLINE on March 17, 2019 during the making of the two-part January 2020 documentary series “America's Great Divide: From Obama to Trump.
Watch Part One here:
And Part Two here:
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This interview is being published as part of FRONTLINE’s Transparency Project, an effort to open up the source material behind our documentaries. Explore the transcript and interactive version of this interview, and others, on the FRONTLINE website:
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#AmericasGreatDivide #frontlinePBS #SteveBannon
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Funding for FRONTLINE is provided through the support of PBS viewers and by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Major funding for FRONTLINE is provided by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Additional funding is provided by the Abrams Foundation, the Park Foundation, The John and Helen Glessner Family Trust, and the FRONTLINE Journalism Fund with major support from Jon and Jo Ann Hagler on behalf of the Jon L. Hagler Foundation.
Visual Culture Computation at the Yale DHLab
Peter Leonard (DHLab, Yale)
The Yale-Smithsonian Partnership presents: Machine Vision for Cultural Heritage & Natural Science Collections
The mass digitization of visual collections, on the order of hundreds of thousands or millions of images, creates new challenges for curators and researchers alike. Simultaneously, the rapid pace of industry innovation in deep learning (from guiding self-driving cars to captioning smartphone images) demands the attention of library, museum, and academic professionals. Existing practices of cataloging and description can be augmented by recent advancements in machine vision – and human expertise can likewise guide the development of future algorithms for the humanities and sciences alike. This event, held at the Franke Family Digital Humanities Laboratory in Yale’s Sterling Memorial Library, brings together scholars and curators from both institutions for conversations, demonstrations, and future partnerships.
dhlab.yale.edu/machine-vision
Who Built Our Capitol?
The untold story of the men and women who built the Minnesota State Capitol Building.
Geographic Information Science (GIS) Day 2019
Join us as we celebrate GIS (Geographic Information Science) Day on Nov. 13 with an all-day series of talks on the use of GIS technology and 3D mapping in cultural heritage preservation and disaster response.
GIS Day — held during Geography Awareness Week (Nov. 12-18) — is an annual, global celebration of GIS and mapping technology, with events held by organizations around the world. Formally started in 1999, GIS Day aims to provide a forum to promote the benefits of GIS research, demonstrate real-world applications of GIS and foster open idea sharing and growth in the GIS community.
The Library’s morning session will open with a keynote address by Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas, co-chair of the Congressional French Caucus focusing on Cultural Heritage Preservation Mapping and Congressional Policy. The morning also will feature talks on the aftermath of the Notre Dame Cathedral fire and the use of GIS and computer vision in disaster response planning and cultural heritage preservation.
The afternoon session will concentrate on applications of the technology with case studies on historic building and engineering archives in cultural preservation, advanced spatial analysis and 3D mapping of UNESCO World Heritage sites
Schedule
Welcome and Introduction of Librarian
Paulette Hasier, Chief, Geography and Map Division
Opening Remarks
Carla Hayden, Librarian of Congress
Cultural Heritage Preservation, Mapping and Congressional Policy Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas
Notre Dame, Computer Vision and the Future of GIS in Cultural Heritage Preservation
John Hessler, Library of Congress & Topology Lab for Virtual Geographic Environments
Documenting Cultural Resources Through GIS
Diedre McCarthy and Catherine Lavoie, Historic American Buildings Survey,
National Park Service
Afternoon: 1-3:30 p.m.
Architectural Archives in Cultural Preservation
Mari Nakahara, Curator of Architecture, Prints and Photographs Division
The Evolution of Data Driven 3D GIS at the National Capital Planning Commission
Kenneth Walton, National Capital Planning Commission, Policy & Research Division
Lhasa VR - Documenting the Historic Tibetan Capital Through 3D GIS
Will Rourk and Guoping Huang, Scholars Lab, University of Virginia.
Questions and Closing Remarks
All Speakers
The Future of the Republican Party | David Azerrad, Allen Guelzo, Henry Olsen
Panel chair: Michael Anton
Panelists: David Azerrad, Allen Guelzo, Henry Olsen
Beginning in 2010, and coinciding with the opening of Hillsdale College’s Allan P. Kirby, Jr. Center for Constitutional Studies and Citizenship on Capitol Hill, the College has hosted an annual Constitution Day Celebration in Washington, D.C. to commemorate the signing of the U.S. Constitution on September 17, 1787.
The program—which features speeches, debates, and roundtable discussions—explores the continuing relevance of the Founders’ Constitution for American politics today.
The Pharaohs - The Templars / Knights Of Malta - The Enemy Within. Pt.1
This is something they don't want you to know!
I have to say this is one nice OP I gonna put in some more info into this to shake things up a bit Now lets take a look at this king shall we: First of all he was an ashkenazi-jew meaning and you can read about it here and keep in mind that they are related with the rothchild family. Here is one of the connection the elite dont want you to know. anyway have a nice reading
This bloodline and its committees is covered by the pharaohs of ancient Egypt, including Rameses II (1295-1228 BC) who is considered the foremost of these greatest pharaohs. He was his country's architect, and his name can be found on any ancient sacred site. The gold mines of Nubia made him rich. His bloodline is also included of the family line, who ruled over Sumer, Babylon, Greece and Troy, and currently leads the world.
One common link in this bloodline is Philip of Macedon (382-336 BC). A tyrant who plundered the key region of Greece, Persia, Syria, Phoenicia, Egypt, Babylon, Sumer former country, and across into India before dying in Babylon at the age of 33. During his reign, founded the city of Alexandria, one of the greatest centers for esoteric knowledge in antiquity. Alexander was taught by the Greek philosopher Aristotle, who in turn was taught by Plato and he in turn by Socrates. Bloodline and the hidden advanced knowledge have always gone hand in hand.
This key bloodline originated in the famous Egyptian queen, Cleopatra (60-30 BC) who married the most famous Roman Emperor Julius Caesar. She bore him a son, who became Ptolemy XIV. With Marcus Anthonius she gave birth to twins, and this man have their own branches and lineage of Herod the Great, known from the stories of Jesus. This branch continues to the Roman Piso family and to the Roman emperor Constantine the Great. Turned Christianity, based on his ancestors' stories, into the religion we know today with Christianity. King Ferdinand of Spain and Queen Isabella of Castile, the sponsors of Christopher Columbus. He instigated the horrific Spanish Inquisition (1478-1834) in which people were tortured and burned at the stake at one point questioned the religion of their ancestors had created.
Another man who used this biblical version and the same bloodline, King James I of England. Under Secretary logical sources are listed here below, his bloodline going as far back as 1550 BC and beyond and includes many Egyptian pharaohs, including Ramses II.
The bloodline moved into France and northern Europe through the Franks and Merovingians, who gave his name to the Merovingian bloodline, and it has continued as a remnant from the Merovingian clan like the names of Clovis and Dagobert, belonging to the privileged elite of Zion, Prior and Rennes-le -Chateau mystery in Languedoc (Provence) in southern France. Many books have been written recently which claims that the Merovingians are in the same bloodline as Jesus.
Merovingians worshiped the goddess Diana and of them there are many even in our days. They founded the city we call Paris and Princess Diana were murdered in the Pont d'Alma tunnel (meaning bridge or passage of the moon goddess') on 31 August 1997. As The Biggest Secret points out, the Windsors, another Merovingian bloodline, were very involved in this ritual murders.
From the Merovingians, this bloodline to our day include: Charlemagne (742-814) who ruled as Emperor of the West in the Holy Roman Empire, a stream of French kings, including Robert II, Philip I, II and III, Louis I, II, VI, VII, VIII, VIIII, XIII, and XVI. The latter married Marie Antoinette of this same bloodline and both were beheaded during the French Revolution. But their son, Daniel Payseur, who was taken to America where he became the secret force behind the Morgan and Carnegie empires. They took great real estate, banking and industrial holdings.
This bloodline also Medici family which supported Christopher Columbus and the contribution of Catherine de Medici, who became Queen of France and died in 1589. Her doctor was Nostradamus: It includes Rene d'Anjou, Duke of Lorraine, and the House of Lorraine which employed Nostradamus and Christopher Columbus. The bloodline relatives belonging to the Medici and the house of Lorraine, Queen Isabella of Castile and King Ferdinand of Spain. These sponsors of Columbus when he discovered the Americas.
Resorts of the Northwoods
“Going to the resort”… a phrase that conjures so many memories and meanings for generations of Minnesotans. From the resort owners and workers who are passionate about their business, to the visitors who eagerly await their escape “up north”, the story of the resort industry in northern Minnesota is one that has touched the lives of countless people. From the large all-inclusive destinations, to the small “mom & pop” seasonal operations, these “Resorts of the Northwoods” have made an indelible impact on our history and culture.
Architecture, Planning and Design | Spring Commencement 2019
Produced through the Division of Communications and Marketing.
Saturday, May 11, 2019
Technology and Aviation
10 a.m., Student Life Center, Kansas State Polytechnic campus
Friday, May 17, 2019
Graduate School
1:00 p.m., Bramlage Coliseum
Veterinary Medicine
3:30 p.m., McCain Auditorium
Saturday, May 18, 2019
Arts and Sciences
8:30 a.m., Bramlage Coliseum
Architecture, Planning and Design
10:00 a.m., McCain Auditorium
Education
11:00 a.m., Bramlage Coliseum
Business Administration
12:30 p.m., Bramlage Coliseum
Agriculture
2:30 p.m., Bramlage Coliseum
Human Ecology
4:30 p.m., Bramlage Coliseum
Engineering
6:30 p.m., Bramlage Coliseum
Kansas State University is committed to providing equal access opportunity and reasonable accommodation to campus programs and services for faculty, staff and students. If you require accommodation to view or hear a video live stream or archive, please submit a request for accommodation. Students should make their request to the Student Access Center ( All others should request accommodation through Human Capital Services (
Othering & Belonging 2019: Day 2, Tuesday April 9 afternoon
Live Stream Schedule for Othering and Belonging 2019 (
-----Monday, April 8-----
2:00 PM – 2:10 PM
Emcee Opening with Chinaka Hodge
2:10 PM – 2:20 PM
Indigenous Opening with Vincent Medina, Louis Trevino
2:20 PM – 2:30 PM
Haas Institute Welcome with Denise Herd
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM
Haben Girma with Disability and Belonging
3:00 PM – 3:30 PM
Know Respect, with Supaman Christian Takes Gun Parrish
4:15 PM – 4:30 PM
Widening the Playing Field: From Athlete to Activist, with Michael Bennett
4:30 PM – 4:45 PM
Egg Drop Soup with Dawn-Lyen Gardner
4:45 PM – 6:00 PM
Making Belonging: Culturemaker Panel with Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah, Michael Bennett, Dawn Lyen Gardner, Jeff Chang
-----Tuesday, April 9-----
9:15 AM – 9:30 AM
Building Belonging in a Time of Othering, with john a. powell
9:45 AM – 10:45 AM
Authoritarianism Rising: The Threat to Democracy and Democracy, with Dorian Warren, Miriam Juan-Torres, Michael Tesler
2:00 PM – 2:10 PM
Community Singing, with Melanie DeMore
2:15 PM – 2:45 PM
Belonging in Community with Brett Cook
2:45 PM – 3:00 PM
Room for all of us: Building inclusive societies., with Rt. Hon. Adrienne Clarkson
3:00 PM – 4:00 PM
Global Migration: The right to stay, the right to move, and the right to belong, with Adrienne Clarkson, Catherine Tactaquin, Mamadou Goita, Bertha Zúñiga Cáceres
4:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Partnerships in Belonging, with Alexis McGill Johnson, Jeff Raikes, Phil Thompson
6:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Will the Future be Feminist? An Inclusive Vision for Belonging with Linda Sarsour, Charlene Sinclair, Saru Jayaramen, Morning Star Gali, Nina Simons
-----Wednesday, April 10-----
9:00 AM – 9:30 AM
Aswat Ensemble: A Performance
9:30 AM – 10:00 AM
Bridging Generations: Intergenerational Movements with Casey Camp-Horinek, Eryn Wise, Thomas Lopez
10:00 AM – 10:40 AM
From Resistance to Renewal: Building An Economy Based on Belonging with Manuel Pastor
2:15 PM – 3:30 PM
The Urgency of Bridging with Desmond Meade, Neil Volz, Ben McBride, Jennifer Martinez
3:30 PM – 4:30 PM
Closing Keynote with Rev. William Barber II
5:00 PM – 5:10 PM
Closing Song with Melanie DeMore
Transcendent Specifics: Buddhist Arts of Tibet, Japan, Korea, and China
Lecture by Katherine Anne Paul, curator of the arts of Asia at the Newark Museum, New Jersey
Like art of other global religions, each region where Buddhism took hold developed locally specific iterations. While the central story about the life of the historical Buddha Shakyamuni is shared by all practitioners, in the artistic practices of Tibet, Japan, Korea, and China, images of figures other than the historical Buddha rose in popularity. Each area made images from locally available materials and developed stylistic characteristics that are distinct to both place and time. This illustrated lecture not only unlocks the basics of how to read narratives and iconography of Buddhist art, but also highlights distinguishing factors of each regional manifestation.
MPs Elect Speaker of the House of Commons
On the first day of the 43rd Parliament, MPs convene in the House of Commons chamber to elect their Speaker. Five candidates are in contention for the role, including Geoff Regan, who served as Speaker in the previous Parliament.
The National for March 09, 2017
Welcome to the National, the flagship nightly newscast of CBC News, hosted by Peter Mansbridge.
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The National is CBC Television's flagship news program. Airing seven days a week, the show delivers news, feature documentaries and analysis from some of Canada's leading journalists.
SCC Board of Supervisors October 8, 2019 9:30 AM
NYU's 186th Commencement Exercises Full Program
New York University President Andrew Hamilton and Board of Trustees Chairman William Berkley presided over NYU's 186th Commencement Exercises held Wednesday, May 16, 2018, at Yankee Stadium. More than 31,000 graduates and guests were in attendence.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau received a doctor of laws degree, honoris causa, at the ceremony and addressed the graduates and guests on behalf of all the degree recipients. The other honorary degree recipients included John Richard Casani, Suzanne Rosik Dodd, Jean Liu, Martine Rothblatt, Bryan Stevenson, and Edward Carroll Stone.
The Albert Gallatin Medal for Outstanding Contributions to Society was presented to Howard M. Meyers—chairman of Quexco Incorporated, noted philanthropist, and devoted adviser and supporter of NYU, most recently manifested in his inspiring gift to the Rory Meyers College of Nursing, now named in honor of his wife’s own nursing legacy.
The Lewis Rudin Award for Exemplary Service to New York City was presented to Alan H. Fishman, chairman of Ladder Capital, chairman emeritus of the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and chairman of the Brooklyn Community Foundation, whose vision continues to propel Brooklyn forward.
University Challenge - Christmas 2018 E09 Semi Final 2
Wheelwright Prize Lecture: Jose Ahedo, “Domesticated Grounds”
Jose Ahedo established his own firm, Studio Ahedo, in 2010. His first completed project is Blanca, a dairy complex of thirteen buildings in the Pyrenees, including animal facilities, research labs, and an education center. Ahedo is also designing residential projects and he has consulted on graphic design, branding, and software development. In his lecture, he will speak about his project “Domesticated Grounds: Design and Domesticity Within Animal Farming Systems,” for which he won the 2014 Wheelwright Prize from Harvard GSD.
Based on travel to remote rural areas in eight countries on four continents, “Domesticated Grounds” explores design and domesticity surrounding animal-farming operations. His trip of more than 8,500 miles over dusty and muddy roads has raised questions regarding our cultural and architectural heritage, infrastructural and territorial policies, landscape design, technological advancements, and gender and social issues associated with animal production. The goal of the investigation, through visits and interviews with some two hundred families, university technicians, scientists, local governments, and policy makers, is to demystify the current plight of various farming communities and seek opportunities for designers to take action in one of the most asymmetrical economic sectors.
In the Shadows of Notre Dame - Afternoon Session
The Library of Congress celebrated GIS Day with a series of talks on the use of geographic information science technology and 3D mapping in cultural heritage preservation and disaster response. The afternoon session concentrated on applications of the technology with case studies on historic building and engineering archives in cultural preservation, advanced spatial analysis and 3D mapping of UNESCO World Heritage sites.
For transcript and more information, visit
Collections as Data: Impact
Building on the success of its “Collections as Data” symposium last year, the Library of Congress National Digital Initiatives (NDI) again will host a daylong symposium featuring a cadre of experts to explore the value of using digital collections and their impact on the public. The symposium will feature case studies and impact stories about the application of digital methods in analyzing and sharing collections.
Join the conversation and tweet your thoughts on ‘Collections as Data’ using the hashtag #AsData.
Key Note Speakers:
Edward Ayers – @edward_l_ayers
Paul Ford - @ftrain
Presenters:
Jessie Daniels - @JessieNYC
Sarah Hatton - @sarah_hatton
Rachel Shorey - @rachel_shorey
Nick Adams - @Nick_B_Adams
Stephen Robertson - @smrobertson3
Patrick Cronin and Thomas Neville - @croninsclass
Tahir Hemphill - @tahirhemphill
Geoff Haines-Stiles - @CrowdandCloudTV
Stephanie Stillo
Library of Congress - @LibraryCongress
Andrew Yang is crowned 2020 Democratic Debate winner in online poll
Democratic 2020 candidate Andrew Yang came out on top in an online Drudge pollAndrew Yang came out on top as the winner of Thursday night's Democratic Debate thanks to his gameshow-like politics, according to an online Drudge poll. While political pundits found it difficult to determine a clear winner, it was the 44-year-old entrepreneur's promise to give away $120,000 to 10 lucky people that got voters in the #YangGang. Out of the 10 candidates on the debate stage in Houston, Texas, Yang won the internet with 14,975 votes (38%) in the online poll.'If you believe that you can solve your own problems better than any politician, go to Yang2020.com and tell us how $1,000 a month will help you do just that,' he said during his opening statements. 'This is how we will get our country working for us again, the American people.' It's no surprise that he would come out on top online as the political outsider has successfully use social media to gain traction. Yang, who usually falls within the second-tier of the 20 candidates running in the Democratic primary, has engaged in several stunts - including crowd surfing - to increase his visibility in a crowded field. In an online Drudge poll Andrew Yang was named the winner. Out of 38,691 voters he grabbed 398% of the vote Andrew Yang and nine other presidential hopefuls went head to head in a three-hour showdown on Tuesday night in Houston, TexasYang is calling his initiative the Freedom Dividend Pilot Program, and will give money to 10 individuals from funds donated to his campaign. 'In America today everything revolves around the ultimately dollar,' Yang said as the first line of his opening statement. 'We have to get our country working for us again, instead of the other way around.' 'That's why I'm going to do something unprecedented tonight,' he continued. 'My campaign will now give a freedom dividend of $1,000 a month for an entire year for 10 American families, somebody watching this at home right now.' Yang was also the second-most tweeted about candidate in the debate, behind frontrunner Joe Biden. Also trending on Twitter was #YangsDebateSurprise, #ISupportYang and#YangGang even before he was asked the first question. One of those tweets about the entrepreneur came from Alexis Ohanian, the Reddit co-founder and husband of Serena Williams, who wrote =: 'Hey I like this idea so much I'll do it personally for those 10 people if you can't.' Yang's social media tactics have clearly worked, and gained him the backing of billionaire Elon Musk, who publicly voiced his support. Even The View co-host Meghan McCain showed an interest in Yang during the debate, tweeting: 'I bet Andrew Yang is fun to go out drinking with.#DemocraticDebate'When it came to Google trends, Yang came in third behind Biden and the number one searched candidate Sen. Cory Booker. Yang was the second most tweeted about Democratic candidate on stage Thursday night. He's been successful at using social media as a tool to
2019 Bristol Community College Commencement
2019 commencement exercises at Bristol Community College held Saturday, June 1, 2019.