it s very small. : troops host: we will see you again tomorrow morning at 7:00 a.m. eastern. [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2010] [captioning performed by national captioning institute] coming up, a discussion about the legality of the governments of a bailout by bankruptcy law experts. then the former u.s. ambassador to the united nations on the threats that different governments pose for free-market economies. that is followed by a look at u.s. policy in the middle east. a former assistant deputy secretary of state for the region. as a peace. later, politics and journalism treated media officials joined political figures in the discussion. tonight, a discussion with the president and ceo of national public radio. vivian schiller talks about the future of public radio. back on october 20, we terminated the contract of one of our part-time news analysts named juan williams. he was a contractor, part-time news analyst. we terminated his contract perfect
calling the president of allied air and that counts is accountability, that that solves the issue. there s no consequence for the person who does it, it diminishes the authority of the president, of the congress, and actually prevents thinking about people with authority, you call at giants, actually emerging in this a debate. i a glad you raised the question. in my view, the possibility for giants as individuals who are models that we can follow, that is gone. what we have our respoibility to do instead is looking at individual genius, to look at collective groups that operate differently. groups now need to be the giants iterms of how they deal with each other, how they talk to each other, in what way they engender trust. we need to put those models, the idea of collective genius, far more important than individual genius. and i say that for another reason because of accountability. i just heard a piece on religion edited here at emory about book burning incidents. one