Television coverage has impacted politics through the years. Cspan founder, brian lamb, moderated the Panel Discussion with two former u. S. Representative from indiana, steve buyer and tim roemer. Rolealso talked about the of social media and its impact on politics. Good evening. Welcome to the 30th anders bursary anniversary celebration of the cspan archives. I am robert browning, the director of the archives. Ago this month that we turned on the vhs machine. I have to explain what those are. Noise as theyt of rewound. We round it is all digital recording. Was to indexgoal it and make it available for public use. Fun 30 years later to look at how those goals have been met which is what our panel is about. Back then, the internet did not exist. Digital recording was unknown. The cloud was something you watched in the sky. Vision a vision of what could be if we kept this material not knowing how it would be used and we are creating the future of american democracy the history of americ
Ur you its a disaster. The answer to this question is no. Show me the word pretext. Change point. We want opportunity. Its an appalling slander. Word muslim. Id the mindedhat kind of sober intelligent Foreign Policy that obama represents. Canadian. Of a closet vote for him for gods sake. Good evening. [applause] to begin with, i want to welcome the canadian audience tuning into this debate. Melt state, live right now on his family. Hispanic. Span. Its great to have you as virtual disciplines. Your interest in your commitment and desire for in warm public discussion. We bring some of the worlds stage tominds to this debate the big issues on our minds that have captured our attention and it would not be possible without the generosity of our host tonight. [applause] i would be remiss if i did not a 100 cardiac hospital, million donation. We are moments now from getting our debaters out here. They will tackle the resolution tonight, yet resolved american democracy is in its worst crisis i
Mrs. Obama these are big girl chairs, arent they . [cheering] look at all of these people. I know, ladies [cheering] and a few good men as well. Whats up . I thought we would sit and have a conversation. We should just chat. Ive brought some guidelines because i know we have an hour, and we want to be useful with our hour. So, you are married to a very nice man. Lets put that over there. That is not very interesting. What we are interested in is you. Mrs. Obama i know that subject well. Shonda we heard a bit of the bio, but this is Michelle Robinson obama. Mrs. Obama good to meet you all. [cheering] shonda for the last eight years, she has been serving the country. Before you were in the white house as first lady, you were a successful attorney, as well as a dean, administrator, primary breadwinner of your household . Mrs. Obama yes, there was a time. Shonda she is brilliant, powerful, impactful, successful. Ul, successful. , what is it like to make that kind of sacrifice to give that
Hundred 30, call 2027488000. Callen 3050 years old, 2027488001. Callu are over 50, 2027488002. You can reach us on social media, on twitter cspanwj and on facebook at facebook. Com cspan. Gallup on from americans attitude towards retirement shows that most americans plan to work beyond retirement age. Nearly two in three employed u. S. Adults, 62 say they plan to work past retirement but on a parttime basis. An additional 11 say they will work for time fulltime once they get retirement age. A quarter say they will stop working altogether. It says that, of those who will continue working but only fulltime, the majority plan to do so because they want to, not because they have to. The proportion of want to versus have to explanation has edged up slightly since 2013 with the percentage saying they want to keep working parttime has risen from 34 to 44 . Nonretirees desires to continue working from 9 will have to in 2013 to 5 today for the percentage of will have to work parttime will has d
The biden institute. This is an hour in 25 minutes. [applause] Vice President biden thank you. John, welcome to my campus. Proud graduate here. I just wanted to see a really beautiful campus. [applause] john, because of the faculty here, they have been kind enough to give me a platform here to work with, in this case, the center for political communication and be part of their series, the National Agenda series. We are working, the bidens, because the board have been generous in allowing me to bring some major, serious staff people from washington who work with me and know you and you know them and to Work Together to produce , some genuinely we have two objectives. One is to produce serious academic material that sheds light on the issues of the day. And two, to bring to the campus expose them to some of the best minds and leaders in the country in all fields, but mainly in this case, politics. And so dr. Hoffman, thank you , for letting us join your operation and thank you for being