The Future of Humanity with Yuval Noah Harari. Video. The Royal Institution, September 28, 2016. YouTube. Q&A.
Sunday, March 19, 2017
Yuval Noah Harari: Techno-Religions and Silicon Prophets.
Yuval Noah Harari: Techno-Religions and Silicon Prophets | Talks at Google. Video. Talks at Google, February 8, 2015. YouTube.
Yuval Noah Harari on the Myths We Need to Survive.
Yuval Noah Harari on the Myths We Need to Survive. Video. Intelligence Squared, October 23, 2015. YouTube.
Tom Friedman on Thriving in the Age of Acceleration.
Thomas Friedman on Thriving in the Age of Acceleration. Video. Intelligence Squared, January 24, 2017. YouTube.
Radically open: Tom Friedman on jobs, learning, and the future of work. Interviewed by Cathy Engelbert and John Hagel. Deloitte Review, No. 21 (July 2017).
Thomas L. Friedman: Thank You for Being Late | Talks at Google. Video. Talks at Google, February 22, 2017. YouTube.
Thomas Friedman, Thank You for Being Late. Video. Politics and Prose, December 16, 2016. YouTube.
Thomas Friedman: A Field Guide to the 21st Century. Video. Commonwealth Club, December 8, 2016. YouTube.
Thomas L. Friedman: Thank You for Being Late. Video. Oxford Martin School, February 2, 2017. YouTube.
Thomas L. Friedman: Learning to Live in an Age of Acceleration. Video. TownHallSeattle, December 5, 2016. YouTube.
Radically open: Tom Friedman on jobs, learning, and the future of work. Interviewed by Cathy Engelbert and John Hagel. Deloitte Review, No. 21 (July 2017).
Thomas L. Friedman: Thank You for Being Late | Talks at Google. Video. Talks at Google, February 22, 2017. YouTube.
Thomas Friedman, Thank You for Being Late. Video. Politics and Prose, December 16, 2016. YouTube.
Thomas Friedman: A Field Guide to the 21st Century. Video. Commonwealth Club, December 8, 2016. YouTube.
Thomas L. Friedman: Thank You for Being Late. Video. Oxford Martin School, February 2, 2017. YouTube.
Thomas L. Friedman: Learning to Live in an Age of Acceleration. Video. TownHallSeattle, December 5, 2016. YouTube.
Donald Trump Pays Tribute to Andrew Jackson on His 250th Birthday.
Remarks by President Trump on the 250th Anniversary of the Birth of President Andrew Jackson. Video. The White House, March 15, 2017. YouTube. Transcript.
Historian Daniel Feller Recaps Trump’s Speech at the Hermitage. The University of Tennessee Knoxville, March 17, 2017.
Like Andrew Jackson, Donald Trump is an intensely American president. By Newt Gingrich. FoxNews.com, March 23, 2017.
Transcript:
The Hermitage
Historian Daniel Feller Recaps Trump’s Speech at the Hermitage. The University of Tennessee Knoxville, March 17, 2017.
Like Andrew Jackson, Donald Trump is an intensely American president. By Newt Gingrich. FoxNews.com, March 23, 2017.
Transcript:
The Hermitage
Nashville,
Tennessee
4:44
P.M. CDT
THE
PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. (Applause.)
Wow, what a nice visit this was.
Inspirational visit, I have to tell you. I’m a fan. I’m a big fan.
I want
to thank Howard Kettell, Francis Spradley of the Andrew Jackson Foundation, and
all of the foundation’s incredible employees and supporters for preserving this
great landmark, which is what it is -- it’s a landmark of our national
heritage.
And a
special thank you to Governor Bill Haslam and his incredible wife, who -- we
just rode over together -- and Senators Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker, two
great friends of mine, been a big, big help.
Both incredible guys.
In my
address to Congress, I looked forward nine years, to the 250th anniversary of
American Independence. Today, I call
attention to another anniversary: the 250th birthday of the very great Andrew
Jackson. (Applause.) And he loved Tennessee, and so do I -- to
tell you that. (Applause.)
On this
day in 1767, Andrew Jackson was born on the backwoods soil of the
Carolinas. From poverty and obscurity,
Jackson rose to glory and greatness -- first as a military leader, and then as
the seventh President of the United States.
He did
it with courage, with grit, and with patriotic heart. And by the way, he was one of our great
Presidents. (Applause.)
Jackson
was the son of the frontier. His father
died before he was born. His brother
died fighting the British in the American Revolution. And his mother caught a fatal illness while
tending to the wounded troops. At the
age of 14, Andrew Jackson was an orphan, and look what he was able to do. Look what he was able to build.
It was
during the Revolution that Jackson first confronted and defied an arrogant
elite. Does that sound familiar to
you? (Laughter.) I wonder why they keep talking about Trump
and Jackson, Jackson and Trump. Oh, I
know the feeling, Andrew. (Laughter.)
Captured
by the Redcoats and ordered to shine the boots of a British officer, Jackson
simply refused. The officer took his
saber and slashed at Jackson, leaving gashes in his head and hand that remained
permanent scars for the rest of his life.
These were the first and far from the last blows that Andrew Jackson
took for his country that he loved so much.
From
that day on, Andrew Jackson rejected authority that looked down on the common
people. First as a boy, when he bravely
served the Revolutionary cause. Next, as
the heroic victor at New Orleans where his ragtag -- and it was ragtag --
militia, but they were tough. And they
drove the British imperial forces from America in a triumphant end to the War
of 1812. He was a real general, that
one.
And,
finally, as President -- when he reclaimed the people’s government from an
emerging aristocracy. Jackson’s victory
shook the establishment like an earthquake. Henry Clay, Secretary of State for the
defeated President John Quincy Adams, called Jackson’s victory “mortifying and
sickening”. Oh, boy, does this sound
familiar. (Laughter.) Have we heard this? (Laughter.)
This is terrible. He said there
had been “no greater calamity” in the nation’s history.
The
political class in Washington had good reason to fear Jackson’s great
triumph. “The rich and powerful,”
Jackson said, “too often bend the acts of government to their selfish
purposes.” Jackson warned they had
turned government into an “engine for the support of the few at the expense of
the many.”
Andrew
Jackson was the People’s President, and his election came at a time when the
vote was finally being extended to those who did not own property. To clean out the bureaucracy, Jackson removed
10 percent of the federal workforce. He
launched a campaign to sweep out government corruption. Totally.
He didn’t want government corruption.
He expanded benefits for veterans.
He battled the centralized financial power that brought influence at our
citizens’ expense. He imposed tariffs on
foreign countries to protect American workers.
That sounds very familiar. Wait
till you see what’s going to be happening pretty soon, folks. (Laughter.)
It’s time. It’s time.
Andrew
Jackson was called many names, accused of many things, and by fighting for
change, earned many, many enemies. Today
the portrait of this orphan son who rose to the presidency hangs proudly in the
Oval Office, opposite the portrait of another great American, Thomas
Jefferson. I brought the Andrew Jackson
portrait there. (Applause.) Right behind me, right -- boom, over my left
shoulder.
Now I’m
honored to sit between those two portraits and to use this high office to
serve, defend, and protect the citizens of the United States. It is my great honor. I will tell you that.
From
that desk I can see out the wonderful, beautiful, large great window to an even
greater magnolia tree, standing strong and tall across the White House
lawn. That tree was planted there many
years ago, when it was just a sprout carried from these very grounds. Came right from here. (Applause.)
Beautiful tree.
That
spout was nourished, it took root, and on this, his 250th birthday, Andrew
Jackson’s magnolia is a sight to behold.
I looked at it actually this morning.
Really beautiful. (Applause.)
But the
growth of that beautiful tree is nothing compared to growth of our beautiful
nation. That growth has been made
possible because more and more of our people have been given their dignity as
equals under law and equals in the eyes of God.
Andrew
Jackson as a military hero and genius and a beloved President. But he was also a flawed and imperfect man, a
product of his time. It is the duty of
each generation to carry on the fight for justice. My administration will work night and day to
ensure that the sacred rights which God has bestowed on His children are
protected for each and every one of you, for each and every American. (Applause.)
We must
all remember Jackson’s words: that in
“the planter, the farmer, the mechanic, and the laborer,” we will find muscle
and bone of our country. So true. So true.
Now, we
must work in our time to expand -- and we have to do that because we have no
choice. We’re going to make America
great again, folks. We’re going to make
America great again -- (applause) -- to expand the blessings of America to
every citizen in our land. And when we
do, watch us grow. Watch what’s
happening. You see it happening
already. You see it with our great
military. You see it with our great
markets. You see it with our incredible
business people. You see it with the
level of enthusiasm that they haven’t seen in many years. People are proud again of our country. And you're going to get prouder and prouder
and prouder, I can promise you that.
(Applause.)
And
watch us grow. We will truly be one
nation, with deep roots, a strong core, and a very new springtime of American
greatness yet to come.
Andrew
Jackson, we thank you for your service.
We honor you for your memory. We
build on your legacy. And we thank God for
the United States of America.
Thank
you very much, everybody.
(Applause.)
END
4:54
P.M. CDT
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