Topping our news, a suspect in the american compound in pec benghazi is on u. S. Soil. He wascat captured two weeks ago now. He arrived in washington, d. C. This morning. He was immediately arrested. The suspect faced a federal judge this after and entered a plea. The story. His name is akmed hatalla. He is the name suspect in an attack on the u. S. Mission in benghazi on september 11th, 2012. Attack killed u. S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three of hez staff. Early on saturday, he was flown to washington by helicopter. He had been held on board and intear gated by investigators since his capture two weeks ago in libya by u. S. Special forces. On saturday, he appeared here before a federal judge amid tight security. He pled not guilty insisting he is in the and did not direct the assault on the u. S. Consulate. He charged it on three counts including murder and providing Material Support to terrorists. The attack is highly c controversial in the United States. Just days before it occu
It, i should just tell it like it happened, in an unvarnished way, warts and all. Youll hear how the two High School Buddies who started microsoft and a computer revolution had some pretty trying times along the way. Do you think he came to think that you werent working as hard as he was and it became a source of resentment with him . Well, i think he was always pushing people to work as hard as they possibly could. You included. Um, maybe me more than everybody else. You talk about his yellingscreaming. Uh, there was a lot of yelling. You guys never understood you never understood the first thing about this. I mean, theres no way. Well figure it out. Welcome to 60 minutes on cnbc. Im steve kroft. In this edition, we meet two Silicon Valley billionaires a generation apart who revolutionized the world of computing and the internet. Facebook Ceo Mark Zuckerberg and paul allen, microsofts cofounder. We begin with Mark Zuckerberg and facebook. If you have a facebook account, youve probably
Picture. And i felt like when i wrote it, i should just tell it like it happened, in an unvarnished way, warts and all. Youll hear how the two High School Buddies who started microsoft and a computer revolution had some pretty trying times along the way. Do you think he came to think that you werent working as hard as he was and it became a source of resentment with him . Well, i think he was always pushing people to work as hard as they possibly could. You included. Um, maybe me more than everybody else. You talk about his yellingscreaming. Uh, there was a lot of yelling. You guys never understood you never understood the first thing about this. I mean, theres no way. Well figure it out. Welcome to 60 minutes on cnbc. Im steve kroft. In this edition, we meet two Silicon Valley billionaires a generation apart who revolutionized the world of computing and the internet. Facebook Ceo Mark Zuckerberg and paul allen, microsofts cofounder. We begin with Mark Zuckerberg and facebook. If you h
Called the marketing of rebellion, why the reason that some causes succeed has more to do with how they resonate in particular constituencies. It over the last 15, 20 years, there has and a slavery search. Been a slavery search. There are certain constituencies and audiences that are infinitely more comfortable talking about problems today than slavery and its legacies and continuing forms of structural in justice, discrimination, and so forth and. Than continuing forms of structural injustice, so forth. Ion, and simination, d there is this pivot or you have a more palatable topic or you talk about today. Politicians love this rhetorical move. It enables them to frame themselves and a positive light , rather than deal with the fundamental injustice. In america, it allows us to be the abolitionist nation. To me, that is why it is so important to put the African American narrative central. Right now, it is not there. I work a lot with a historically black college in mississippi. What wer
I mean, its not a pretty picture. And i felt like when i wrote it, i should just tell it like it happened, in an unvarnished way, warts and all. Youll hear how the two High School Buddies who started microsoft and a computer revolution had some pretty trying times along the way. Do you think he came to think that you werent working as hard as he was and it became a source of resentment with him . Well, i think he was always pushing people to work as hard as they possibly could. You included. Um, maybe me more than everybody else. You talk about his yellingscreaming. Uh, there was a lot of yelling. You guys never understood you never understood the first thing about this. I mean, theres no way. Well figure it out. Welcome to 60 minutes on cnbc. Im steve kroft. In this edition, we meet two Silicon Valley billionaires a generation apart who revolutionized the world of computing and the internet. Facebook Ceo Mark Zuckerberg and paul allen, microsofts cofounder. We begin with Mark Zuckerbe