Good morning, good afternoon and good evening wherever you are. I hope youre safe and above all healthy. Im the senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment center of peace and i host a series of virtual conversations on critical important issues. Im truly pleased to welcome to the show a friend and colleague of many years, david satterfield. I first met david when we were both working in the bureau of intelligence and research he was on temporary assignment and i was doing lebanon and pella sitting in during the 1982 invasion and the tragedy that followed american policy. David has had his distinguished career in the foreign service. He has a capacity to read the real estate of a complex region accurately and to do so with great power and with great impressions. Seeing the world the way it is, i would argue can be very discouraging, sometimes paralytic. Seeing the world the way it is is critically important if we are going to have any attempt at trying to change it. Welcome to carnegie con
Good morning, good afternoon and good evening wherever you are. I hope youre safe and above all healthy. Im the senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment center of peace and i host a series of virtual conversations on critical important issues. Im truly pleased to welcome to the show a friend and colleague of many years, david satterfield. I first met david when we were both working in the bureau of intelligence and research he was on temporary assignment and i was doing lebanon and pella sitting in during the 1982 invasion and the tragedy that followed american policy. David has had his distinguished career in the foreign service. He has a capacity to read the real estate of a complex region accurately and to do so with great power and with great impressions. Seeing the world the way it is, i would argue can be very discouraging, sometimes paralytic. Seeing the world the way it is is critically important if we are going to have any attempt at trying to change it. Welcome to carnegie con
Good morning, good afternoon and good evening wherever you are. I hope youre safe and above all healthy. Im the senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment center of peace and i host a series of virtual conversations on critical important issues. Im truly pleased to welcome to the show a friend and colleague of many years, david satterfield. I first met david when we were both working in the bureau of intelligence and research he was on temporary assignment and i was doing lebanon and pella sitting in during the 1982 invasion and the tragedy that followed american policy. David has had his distinguished career in the foreign service. He has a capacity to read the real estate of a complex region accurately and to do so with great power and with great impressions. Seeing the world the way it is, i would argue can be very discouraging, sometimes paralytic. Seeing the world the way it is is critically important if we are going to have any attempt at trying to change it. Welcome to carnegie con
good morning. it is saturday, february 10th. you re watching velshi on msnbc. i m charles coleman junior filling in for my friend and colleague, ali velshi. we have got a lot to talk about. we begin this morning with donald trump s new reality tv show. we all remember the apprentice. the whole, you re fired, thing? what we are watching now is more like, the defendant. a terrifying real-life spinoff series played out in actual courtrooms and along the campaign trail each and every day. talk about reality tv. the stakes in this game show are, quite literally, american democracy and the rule of law. let s be clear, no one is watching it as their, quote on quote, guilty pleasure. everyone is watching. this week s episode contained plot twist, new characters, and twist that left us all wondering what is happening next. let s discuss. donald trump has not had many good days in court in the last two years. for the guy who wants infamously predicted we will get tired of so much winni
He he received his ph. D. From brown university, and hell be discussing most recent book, half american the epic story of africanamericans fighting in World War Two at home and abroad. Now to, join this this conversation this discussion is dr. Marcus cox marcus is a fellow with the jenny craig institute. And is also currently the dean of Fayetteville State University right outside beautiful fort north carolina. Oh the. Previously many of you know him from town here where hes associate dean of graduate studies xavier and a graduate ph. D. From northwestern an and an expert on africanamerican military history. And so its great to have these two amazing scholars and comrades on the stage with us today. And with that, marcus, ill turn it over to you. And sir, you much. Thank you so much. Thank you everybody for being here. Thank you, mike. And everyone, this is a great opportunity to learn a little bit more about whats happening in the United States and in particular what africanamericans.