after all, today more than ever, most liberal men agree with liberal women on these issues, and conservative men and women agree with each other. i think it is interesting to in the early feminist movement, many feminists did construct this battle as one of , womengainst men generally being oppressed by men generally. but perhaps, feminists have changed, much as you think that conservative women have changed in a way that we have not always noticed. because today, you will find much more that feminists see this not as a battle among women, or as between women and men, but really a battle between liberals, liberal men and women together, versus conservatives, men and women together. sense, it is really a battle about holding onto the , as conservatives will also a new themselves, versus way in the future, which is how liberals will often say they are doing. i think you have raised the important question of common ground. shown that though defending conservative ideas, haveomen
elements that trigger law enforcement concern as well as the popular press concern, then suddenly this idea of somebody listening to god and having his followers do things that seem to be aberrant to national norms, that s dangerous, and that needs to be policed and controlled. wesleyan university religion professor peter gottschalk argues that religious persecution in america has been prevalent since the mid-1800 s, even committed by the very government that is supposed to protect us from persecution. sunday night at 9:00, part of book tv this weekend on c-span2. next discussion with peter they, who cover presidential campaigns. this year he conducted a study on the impact of twitter on media coverage. from the new hampshire institute of politics in manchester, this is 45 minutes. hello, i am james pindell from wmur-tv, and peter will talk about the point of the paper and what he is trying to study and where it came from, and then we will ask some questions. the heart
christine processed christine trust will have a microphone and will be able to ask questions of the panel. thank you very much. i m deirdre english. i cannot claim to the same level of neutrality and objectivity that professor schrieber brought to this work. i have debated in the past, and not entirely successfully. she was very good. and i have written critically about conservative women in the past. but i have also gone as a journalist with great interest to alaska, to sarah palin s hometown, with something in the spirit that you brought to your work, to try to understand her religion, her neighbors, and her background. and i really appreciate your scholarship, and i appreciate the effort made to try to understand, to see to understand and then to be understood. i think it is a good principle. i appreciate the respect you brought for your subjects and your own open-mindedness and you re pointing out their importance for social science as well as politics. i think you ha
the feedback between consumers was to say the least very lengthy. that s as much history as i m going to bore you with this morning, but i wanted to go down memory lane because i think it s going to accentuate something. we call it the data factory. i want to spend a couple of minutes explaining the powers that have enabled the enormous rise of the data factory in the last 10 years. so a few quick thoughts. first, the explosion of bandwidth and the change here has been unlike anything anyone has ever seen before in any comparable time over the last 25 years. the second is in storage. it s hard for us to imagine today that about 14% of stored information existed believe it or not on vinyl records. then we all know what has happened with computers and computation. 25 years ago, most of the computing power in the universe was in a pocket calculator. obviously, that has shifted dramatically as the years have gone by. the other thing that has helped change everything for consumers
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