armenia remains a dream, a subject of stories, yet still, against all odds, a place. you, what do you own the world? how do you own disorder disorder now somewhere between the sacred silence sacred silence and sleep disorder, disorder i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder sha la la la la sha la la la la la sha la la la la sha la la la la la la anthony: armenia is a small, landlocked christian nation surrounded by mostly non-christian neighbors. azerbaijan over there, iran down there, and turkey right there. turkey, and relations with turkey, and the armenian people s terrible history with that country being the central and defining issue of armenian identity. and a present-day political reality 103 years after what just about anyone would call genocide. turkey has always adamantly denied that, saying it was simply
youth of a young country. marie lou: the main goal is to complement their formal education. the curriculum is not mandatory. you pick what you want. you can pick music, graphic design, 3-d modeling, or programming, game, whatever, photography, robotics. anthony: the managing director, marie lou papazian and her husband pegor, are two former members of the armenian diaspora. both extraordinary, but not unusual in the new armenia. they are not expats, but repats. people who, though not born here, have chosen to come home and help build a nation. pegor: we grew up together in beirut and moved to the states. and the reason we moved was because of the armenian thing.
a sympathetic figure and the media descended on sandra fluke giving her a high profile platform to fight back. what does it say about the college co-ed susan fluke who goes before a congressional committee and essentially says that she must be paid to have sex? what does that make her? it makes her a slut, right? it makes her a prostitute. what was your first reaction when you heard the comments? well, i think my reaction was the reaction that a lot of women have had when historically they ve been called these types of names, and that really i think a lot of women across america have had to this, and that was initially to be stunned by it, but then to quickly feel outraged and very upset. joining us now to talk about the echos of this media and the twist in the presidential campaign, julia mason, host of sirius s the press pool, david prom from the daily beast and an analyst for cnn and dana millbank, columnist for the washington post. david, you are a kwifsh who