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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190704:11:24:00

Positive experience. they saw the role of the military in a different way. and roosevelt always understood, i think, earlier than most, and he advocated for it louder than most. the book spends a lot of time on the rough riders, which were only in existence for a few months, as arguably the most famous military unit this nation has ever seen. why do you think they have captured america s imagination here a century later? and what lessons what experience did the rough riders shape teddy roosevelt going into the white house zb? the rough riders were famous at the time. it s not a reflected glory because roosevelt became president. at the time they were celebrated. people loved them. newspaper reporters why? some of them were celebrities. the first and second ranked tennis players in the country quit tennis to become rough riders and they were all of these and they were characters. it was like the dirty dozen but there were a thousand of them. it captured the imagination o ....

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190704:11:50:00

Contributing to increasing loneliness in modern societies, a kind of way in which we lose face-to-face connection for each other, you can think of those as a kind of toxin, a kind of external force, which is deranging us deranging us from an otherwise more natural and i would say more wholesome way of living together. all right. the book is blueprint, evolutionary origins of a good society. absolutely fascinating. dr. nicholas crosckas, thank you very much. it s good to have i on the show. we ll be right back with much more morning joe. morning jo. we re reporters from the new york times. ....

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190704:11:22:00

Riders and the dawn of the american century. thank you so much, clay, for being with us. talk about how this war influenced the way the united states looked at foreign policy. you know, it s funny to think back. in the 19th century, particularly towards the end, america was really, we were anti-military, we were just trying to figure ow who we were as a country. and the spanish/america war comes along and sort of raised a bunch of questions and answered them at the same time. what kind of force would we deploy abroad? what was our relationship to the military going to be like? and i think one of the things that comes out of this war that i think is sometimes underappreciated is how much how moralistic we were about the war and how much the deployment of force, the invasion of cuba was about humanitarian intervention. and it s funny, reading some of the talk around this intervention, it s so similar to what people were saying at the beginning of vietnam, at the beginning of the iraq ....

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190704:12:16:00

It. but anything that knows anything about music, most of it originated in the south. the blues created on the mississippi delta and across the deep south. rock and roll created in large by by a guy from st. louis called chuck barry. why is it, why is it that most forms of american music did start in the deep south and in those forms of music, most of those forms of music were started by black americans, by black musicians and by black singers? i think expression. a chance to express yourself in a way that maybe you couldn t any other way. and i think that was probably the impetus of all of this. starting on country music, it comes 5u89 way from the welsh coal mines in ireland and into appalachia and down into the ....

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190704:12:38:00

At northwestern university, shelanie sanchor. she s the title of new book beeline, what spelling bees reveal about generations path to success. what do we learn about the next generation and beyond through these competitions? so we learned generation z is the most diverse and spelling bees offer a way for us to consider how childhood competition has increased tremendously and how poised and camera ready kids have to be to compete on a stage like the national spelling bee. and you talk, professor, about the change sort of from the everybody gets a trophy generation generation, which looks like a thing of the past at this point. when i was growing up, yes, you could play little league, but if you wanted to be good, you had to be on the travel team and play in the off season. ....

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