and carried massachusetts, including many isolationists in massachusetts. many people later on faulted roosevelt for having said something that was not true. the way he explained what he had said was that, i might have said come except in the case of attack and that begin a is attacked it is not going to be a foreign war so he felt that was a pledge that was fair. and they think he was probably trying to be very exact because he knew jim was in the audience and he would be writing about him later on. [laughter] so he had better be very careful. in any case, jim, as bob was nice enough to mention, spent much of world war ii with a combat historian where franklin roosevelt was his commander in chief. jim once said when i came back from world war ii, i knew i must write a book about franklin roosevelt, and he started very quickly with 1945 not long after the president died. i think at that point the presidents were still in the torpedo factory and alexander virginia. than they
.. is the reason corporations are into new lot of things, cost. so we have to find ways to make those investments ne he economically viable for the enterprises sweeny to be protecting the systems and so that s one thing we can do. we have suggested a few insurance, streamlined regulation, a range of things to provide those incentives. that would address the vast majority of people. on the other hand, we have these ultra sophisticated attacks i was talking about before. one of the characteristics of these attacks is that the bad guys are going to get in. that is what persistent refers to. they are so persistent and you have no perimeter defense. so what that means is we have to go through the model and the perimeter defense to a different strategy. however, we have ways to do this and we have proposed these to the government. for example, we don t have a lot of control over the attackers when they are out there in the wild as we like to say. the internet is too fast, etc.. if
faithful friends and ever cheerful companions. the thing same could be said of our three guests on stage today. james macgregor burns can rightly be called the dean of roosevelt biographers. he of the pulitzer prize-winning political scientist and historian and a pioneer in leadership studies. indeed he is the devoted his entire professional life to the study of leadership in all its forms. small wonder then that he turned to franklin roosevelt as a focus of examination. in 1971 professor burns won the pulitzer prize and the national book award for his landmark study of fdr, roosevelt soldier of freedom. he is also the author of the acclaimed companion book, roosevelt the lion and the fox. together with another of our guests, susan dunn professor burns also co-authored the three roosevelts, leaders who transformed america and the 2004 biography of george george washington. professor burns 1978 book leadership is still considered the seminal work in the field of leadershi
continue to cover. sarah weinman, news editor of publishers marketplace. publishersmarketplace.com is the web site. thank you. we asked what are you reading this summer? here s what you had to say. we re back live now at the langston hughes auditorium. this is booktv live coverage of the 13th annual harlem book fair. up next, a panel discussion of the late manning marables recent biography of malcolm x. good afternoon. welcome to the 2011 harlem book fair. my name is mr. williams, i m associate professor at fairfield university and chief his touron at the jackie robinson museum. i want to welcome you to this forum. we are here to discuss manny marable s recent book malcolm x and the recent impact on the life and legacy of the african-american icon. manny marable first began the study as a corrective to the autobiography of malcolm x which stood as one the most important works of african-american literature produced. dispute the widespread influence and claim, ther
send us a tweet at booktv using the tag summer reading to let us know what you plan on reading. you can e-mail us at booktv@c-span.org. we are back live at the langston hughes auditorium at the schomburg center for research and black culture. this is live coverage of the thirteenth annual harlem book fair. up next panel discussion of the late manning parable s recent biography of malcolm x. good afternoon. welcome to the 2011 harlem book fair. i am yohura williams from fairfield university and chief historian at the jackie robinson museum. i want to welcome you to this forum. we are here to discuss manning parable s recent book malcolm x a life of reinvention and its impact on our appreciation of the life and legacy of this african-american icon. manning parable began his study as a corrective to the influential autobiography of malcolm x which for five decades stood as one of the most important works of african-american literature ever produced. despite its widespread in