.. how did he manage to draw those flying lines that break free of this down and take to the year? how could he or was it chique? or was it she? well, this was came from a conversation i had in santa fe at the museum, and marvelous museum of popular art they had their, with the three visiting at the museum, and at the end we were talking about the so-called story cart. this question a rose. why? why not? perhaps they were winning. perhaps that is a known. the artist were women, and that is why i thought, this is a good story that deserves to be written. later on i went on writing the story, redington, 12, 15 times, the same story and cutting and cutting until the moment in which i think i feel, i feel, think that. they tried to be better than silence. host: debt story affected me a lot, because i have always been fascinated by the cave paintings and to me, what struck me the most that made me think was of course the beauty, but i was thinking of the intellectual capacity
.. thank you. [applause] nussle i think we have got some time left for questions and responses. i look forward to engaging with you. i think they have a microphone to go around. if you have a question please wait for the green blight to appear on the microphone and say your name and ask your question. my name is captain rich at the department. i wonder about ten years ago when i was and could cadet talking about cooking and machine gun on to the drone and the instructor said that wasn t ethical. when did change go from and thomas weapons being on ethical and being okay and widespread? it s a great question because it s almost two parts. it s when did the attitude change that we could move into this year and second is can it ever be ethical, is it ethical or not? and the magic moment as he was actually an air force colonel i talked with described 9/11. basically there is a before and after to the relationship with the robotics industry and the pentagon. prior to 9/11 mos
wouldn t give them the experimental robot back they liked it so much. so we have seen this shift and to the arming aspect of it, one of the things the book wrestles with is when you asked was almost like the lord baltimore issue, thou shall not be discussed if we are talking about harry potter parallels here because there s all sorts of logics that t. cost on this pathway that we don t like to talk about. so one is a personal savings issue. .. going quicker and quicker so they have the counter samper devices that use acoustics and lasers to sniper shoots the unit, it immediately point said the unit comeuppance a laser beam target on the sniper said. if you don t react quick enough the guy goes back down so you lost an opportunity so technically is easy to put a laser on the, one of the gun as well, another logical path when that gets you there so the point is to get each of these logical pathways that take you down this final frontier of army and that leads to the other part
engage obama s old trade and community development i think a lot of the places would readily move off the drug trade. the province which produces the most opium in afghanistan ironically the fields are irrigated by this enormous irrigation project we did in the 1960 s which is why they grow more opium than anyone else. but they re very nostalgic for the day the americans were there and helping them to grow melons and roses and they re all sorts of stuff and produce they can grow. it is very fertile farmland. but it will be expensive to try to move them onto alternative livelihoods . it is predicted it will cost $5 billion over five years to move afghan farmers on to alternative crops. that sounds like a big price tag and tell you consider rears spending $2 billion every month to run our military operations when you run the numbers that looks like a economical way out. anyone else? thank you. thank you very much [applause] . . mr. galeano is into viewed by john dinges, a journ
the second part. guest: yes okay. after words and several other c-span programs are available for download as podcasts. more with eduardo galeano and john dinges in a moment to. this summer booktv is asking what are you reading? i m marsha blackburn and rep. to the seventh congressional district. this summer i am going to really do a lot of reading and i am looking for a two reading liberty and tyranny, or tear in the end of liberty. i think that that sounds like it and fantastic one. what i also want to read it is one second after which is about the electromagnetic pulse and that is something being on energy and commerce and protecting the grids, something that is important to us. the accidental guerrilla is also one of that is on the list that i plan to read this summer. so that is one a book each month and i ll probably and some others to that as i go through the year. if you want to see more program information and other bidding less go to our website at booktv.