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Morning Joe Weekend

that's how the leaders we look up to became the leaders. >> i think what happens with prophets and heros, they become larger than life. we think they have qualities that are beyond us. and so then what we do is we follow them. when we follow them, we give up the hard work of working on ourselves. we don't see joe, that martin luther king exhibited the courage that is in me. that this person revealed a kind of character that i'm capable of demonstrating in my own life. instead, we have this longing. if only we had fdr today. if only we had dr. king today. no, we need you. part of the challenge is to rid ourselves from being, you know, engaging in supplication, from being fans in the pews, to pastors. as opposed to being in the journey. being in the journey. so this book is a radical call for every day, ordinary people, to take control of this

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Morning Joe Weekend

what is my relationship to malcolm x? how can i find my particular signature voice without engaging to them? these lectures are an attempt to call people to take responsibility for now. to take responsibility for the future. >> and isn't it true, eddie, that you focus on king and malcolm and ella baker. they became that because of activism. dr. king left boston university, went to montgomery, just to pass the southern church and ran into the situation with rosa parks. he didn't plan rosa parks and plan to do what he did. ella baker, doing the work in mississippi. malcolm x finding himself after being a convict. and i was raised by some of the king men, jesse jackson was a student leader that emerged. so i think the critical part of your book is we are the leaders that we've been looking for.

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Morning Joe Weekend

democracy. and to disrupt a style of leadership, which we give over our power to folks. to understand that we, in fact, have the power. >> we expect too much from them. once we exult them, like dr. king didn't say, i wish sir good marshall was in montgomery. we look for the flaws and say, oh, i made you this great image and i find out that you don't wash your feet that well. i mean, it looked to break down people rather than lift ourselves up. >> absolutely. >> so eddie, this conversation, especially what you're just talking about, the two of you. what has happened to us? why have so many americans lost the memory of what this country was and still is, and ignore what the country still is? >> you know, it's a really important point. i think, and i'm following here, who has a new book coming out. he says we're in a second lost cause. we're in the mist of a second

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Morning Joe Weekend

>> you know, i think we outsourced really our responsibility for democracy for too long. we out sourced to politicians, and heros. we have given over our responsibility, our power. what i wanted to do, the title comes from ms. ella baker. ms. baker said a strong people doesn't need strong leaders. she wanted us to involve ourselves or engage in politics in such a way that every day, ordinary people, involved, indigenous to the space, would emerge as the folk responsible for transforming their lives. what i try to do in this book is find my own feet. i'm trying to figure out my relationship to this tradition that made me who i am. what does it mean to be a gen x or born in the shadow of the 1960s. contrary to some folks, that's the greatest generation in my mind. what does it mean to be born in the shadow of them and find my own voice? i had to figure out, what is my relationship to dr. king?

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Velshi

before the break i explained how the u.s. withdraw from the iranian nuclear deal in 2018 has not benefited america but resulted in a more emboldened and dangerous around. there's perhaps no one who understands the crucial importance of the deal better than my next guest, dr. ernest moniz served as 13th u.s. secretary of energy under barack obama from 2013 to 2017. as secretary he worked on energy technology innovation, america's nuclear and strategic stability along with then secretary of state john kerry. he was a key negotiator of the iranian nuclear deal, formerly known as a joint conference a plan of action, jcpoa. moniz joins me no. he is professor emeritus at m.i.t. and ceo of the nuclear threat initiative . secretary moniz, good to see you. thank you for being with us this morning. >> thank you for having me.

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Velshi

so they could put together a nuclear explosive, fairly soon. >> dr. sally he is an expert that studied at m.i.t. i understand you were at the same time but you did know each other and developed a relationship during the course of negotiations. and those negotiations took many years. the united states got involved toward the end and it was very effective, the u.s. involvement. that closed the deal. i'm looking at a question with john kerry, with you, wendy sherman is in that picture. they were intense negotiations at times, but they happened. what is the value of the relationships that were developed, back then, and how could that help in times of remarkable tensions like we are in right now? >> first of all, to give a flavor of the intensity of the negotiations, secretary carrie,

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Velshi

listeners understand, they have enriched 60% of the uranium for that weapon. to give you a flavor, 90% is what is considered to be weapons grade. but at 60%, they have done all but a few percent of the effort needed to get there. that is why the time is so short. and now, the question is, as has been said by a number of iranians over the last month really, will they reconsider the issue of going to having a nuclear explosive or not. so far, we are pretty sure they don't have a nuclear weapon. but my former negotiating partner, dr. sally has said they have essentially all of the technical requirements, demonstrated within iran.

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Inside Politics With Manu Raju

upfront pricing with usps ground advantage some people just know that the best rate for you is a rate based on you with all sdi because they are people out there who aren't used a lot of them and you don't drive like my child being rais by a robot drivers are not you? >> yes. thank you so much. all 50 of my subscribers no. definitely not. you save with dr. wise and get a rate based on you during good hands with all sdi lactate is 100% real melt just without the lactose delicious to just ask my old friend kevin now than like enjoying the coal one while watching the game who's willing? >> we are my friend. we are imagine a future where plastic is not wasted but instead remade over and over into the things that keep our food

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

right, joining us right now to discuss his marine scientists and environmental entrepreneur and climate risk expert, dr. deborah brosnan. >> great to see you, doctor. so blue carbon, wonderful. so blue carbon. i mean i guess it's a new discovery. it's not a new ally, is it? it's just a new realisation of things that have been in place for a very long time. >> exactly. >> blue carbon is a new word for something that's been going on and we've been depending on for tens of thousands of years these coaston ecosystem's kelp forests, coaston marshes, mangroves, seagrass beds, literally pull carbon from out of the atmosphere and they turn it into grows so when you look at a mangrove tree or a coastal marsh, you're literally looking at living carbon. >> and they've been doing this forever. and for us and since

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CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

ecosystems. be an advocate for doing in business in the world differently dr. deborah brosnan. >> thank you so much. >> sure. to tune in everybody two, the cnn films presents blue carbon natures, hidden power. >> it premieres tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern pacific only on cnn all right. straight ahead. >> taylor swift's new album has ushered in a whole new era for the pop star will share how fans are reacting to the tortured poets department. that's next hour in the cnn newsroom. >> central weekdays that's seven eastern with chewy save 20% on your first pharmacy order. >> so you can put an end to the edge get flea and tick medication delivered right to your door dude, what are you doing i'm protecting my car.

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