Anytime you want i always appreciate lets go to protests to peter i think that all of us would agree and our audience that its unlikely that we would ever compare to donald trump ok theyre very very different but they do have one commonality and its an attitude towards foreign adventures now donald trump has not been able to do much about his rhetoric of the campaign while hes been in office but keeps going both of them are slammed every time they go outside the the borders or the perimeters of the bipartisan commitment to these wars why is it why do they get slammed down so hard so fast even with people within their own party go ahead peter. Well as you indicate there is a bipartisan consensus when it comes to American Foreign policy and its dominated by neo. Conservative or if you its based on this idea of a very. In exceptionalism that the United States has the right duty the obligation to intervene around or all of the United States is gods gift to humanity unlike everybody else wh
Its wonderful to have you here. My name is roger zakheim. Im the director of the Reagan Institute, the d. C. Office of the Ronald Reagan president ial foundation and institute. And hope you all have been enjoying this reception in honor of our very own director of scholarly initiatives, dr. Anthony eames, and this Exciting Book launch. I want to extend a special welcome to kelly for his there our kelly. I anthony anthonys wife and i havent experienced the completion of writing a book, but i imagine that labor wasnt only anthony so grateful to you and regret that the other member of the reagan team, owen, is not here this evening, but i know bedtime for him was probably about 10 minutes ago, so but so great to have you here and tell no one will have to come for the next book launch which gonna be within a year no doubt, right . Yeah. I also want to welcome our esteemed guests and distinguished reagan scholar, dr. Henry. Now, wheres henry . There. He is. Right. And you know, we are here
Directed nobel winning scientists, engineers or military and the civilians who worked on the atomic bomb project in los alamos. Humans back to ancient greece have been wanting to split atom. Theyve talked about it in this individual able part of of matter. And so thats a concept that had been around for a while but humans still havent seen an atom i its so small we havent seen it there wasnt until the end of the 19th century that scientists started being able to tinker with doing things, smashing things together and kind of figuring out what came out kind of like you smash a car together and the carburetor comes out and not knowing what carburetor is. You go. We know that something in the car, but we dont know. So thats kind of in a very basic way what atomic physics was about. But then in 1938, two german physicists working berlin, strassman and hahn bombarded, this lump of material called your cranium, and they got a curious result. It kind of released a lot of heat. And then it crea
Scientists, engineers or military and the civilians who worked on the atomic bomb project in los alamos. Humans back to ancient greece have been wanting to split atom. Theyve talked about it in this individual able part of of matter. And so thats a concept that had been around for a while but humans still havent seen an atom i its so small we havent seen it there wasnt until the end of the 19th century that scientists started being able to tinker with doing things, smashing things together and kind of figuring out what came out kind of like you smash a car together and the carburetor comes out and not knowing what carburetor is. You go. We know that something in the car, but we dont know. So thats kind of in a very basic way what atomic physics was about. But then in 1938, two german physicists working berlin, strassman and hahn bombarded, this lump of material called your cranium, and they got a curious result. It kind of released a lot of heat. And then it created a different element
Military and the civilians who worked on the atomic bomb project in los alamos. Humans back to ancient greece have been wanting to split atom. Theyve talked about it in this individual able part of of matter. And so thats a concept that had been around for a while but humans still havent seen an atom i its so small we havent seen it there wasnt until the end of the 19th century that scientists started being able to tinker with doing things, smashing things together and kind of figuring out what came out kind of like you smash a car together and the carburetor comes out and not knowing what carburetor is. You go. We know that something in the car, but we dont know. So thats kind of in a very basic way what atomic physics was about. But then in 1938, two german physicists working berlin, strassman and hahn bombarded, this lump of material called your cranium, and they got a curious result. It kind of released a lot of heat. And then it created a different element that was further down on