tv you ve had a great month. birthday weeks on the bestseller list, which is every author s dream. in the middle of freedom from president obama. congratulations. thank you, and it s wonderful to do this with you anna a good friend. thank you. let s talk about prague winter. you were 59 years old just being sworn in when you learned that your parents had been born jewish and that some of members of your family had been killed in the holocaust. you answered a lot of questions you dealt with it. it was a painful period what made you go back to it and write a whole book on the subject? well, because i didn t think i had all the answers and and let me just explain a little bit of the context of how this happened when i was ambassador at the united nations was when people started writing me letters. i hadn t really been a public figure till then and some of the people asked for money or visas and then there were letters that would say something about the village that my parents we
you would say the same we would say the same thing you kind of grow and think about and learn from you know, the losses and you know a tough situation like the edward family more than other than other situations then the victories which come a little easy and susan so susan and i have first met her where you know, if she was usa today when i work for president clinton and very happy to i m not sarah alfred states that are help with supposed to do this. they re in session. so sarah asked me if i would moderate that i was like susan page. i m talking about nancy pelosi. this is definitely my wheelhouse i i wrote a book called dear madam president sort of based off of the experiences. i worked learning learned working for hillary and second book. she proclaims our declaration of independence from a man s world. it s not a declaration of war. just don t see any reason we need to continue to follow a man s path and that is what just something about her is about right that you hear
closing up shop here for the night. but as for the first couple of hours, we saw that initial protest from those who are opposed to abortion rights, who were elated, and celebrating, and happy. and after a few hours, they left. the streets were filled with hundreds and thousands of people who were the ones that were hoping that maybe we would see a compromise. they were maybe hoping that it away, we re expecting to see this decision come down, it s not what they got today. we saw tears of joy and despair. we had very emotional heavy conversations. and we will hear some of those conversations, stephanie. a lot of things have been going through my mind, anger, deep sadness, and a desire to turn this around the. this is going through my mind. it s a rollercoaster emotion! it s completely utter joy that roe is overturned. women are going to die between now and when we get legislation passed, which is untenable. we heard a lot of concern around that last statement you hear
john edwards. john edwards presidential campaign, and in somelo ways its the losses. i think nancy pelosi s would say the same thing. you kind of grow and think about and learn from the losses and a tough situation like the edwards family, more than other situations. a little easy and susan so susan and i have first met her where you know, if she was usa today when i work for president clinton and very happy to i m not sarah alfred states that are help with supposed to do this. they re in session. so sarah asked me if i would moderate that i was like susan page. i m talking about nancy pelosi. this is definitely my wheelhouse i i wrote a book called dear madam president sort of based off of the experiences. i worked learning learned working for hillary and second book. she proclaims our declaration of independence from a man s world. it s not a declaration of war. just don t see any reason we need to continue to follow a man s path and that is what just something about he
we have a fantastic one speaker. this is a real treat to welcome dr. bjorn lombard to steamboat institute dr. lomborg is the president and founder of the copenhagen consensus center. he is the author of the best-selling false alarm how climate change panic costs us trillions hurts the poor and fails to fix the planet. he will be signing copies of your books that you brought with you in the four year after his presentation. dr. longboard challenges mainstream concerns about development and the environment and points out that we need to focus the attention on the smartest solutions first. he s a visiting fellow at the stanford stanford university s hoover institution. and of course president of the copenhagen consensus center, which brings together many of the world s top economists including seven nobel laureates. dr. longboard is a frequent participant in public debates on policy issues his analysis and commentaries have appeared regularly in such prestigious publications as