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Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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every day on chicago's west side, john write more, nell brown, and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find some one overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts, a name for him. look up in the sky. it's a bird to play. no, we're just me. nor can on the schooner man does was a repo, was there for mar, nell brown, a recovered heroine, attic, the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost of auburn prisoner of that war. i'm a casualty from that war. a war against addiction that plays out in the streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g, 0, chicago, still to come in this half hour warnings that sudan is running out of vital medicine fuel and wheat. because protest her as i've shut down the port sedan and 2 americans who use that chili peppers to solve the mystery of how we sense temperature and
every day on chicago's west side, john write more, nell brown, and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find some one overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts, a name for him. look up in the sky. it's a bird to play. no, we're just me. nor can on the schooner man does was a repo, was there for mar, nell brown, a recovered heroine, attic, the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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brown together? >> booth was an actor and he left to go witnessed the execution of john brown but he looked at john brown, obviously he detested john brown stood for, a white supremacist and hated abolitionists but he was struck by john brown, they were there so eventually john brooks booth of the center, it was ironic a lot of southerners had much more positive things to say about john, they demonized him but admired under pressure, there is a thing about southern honor so i think john wilkes booth and john brown in reverse. the grandest of the century but booth was the right one. john brown died for the wrong reason. try to murder what he considered the right one but he wanted to be john brown in reverse. >> do you want to add to that? >> it's striking to me in some ways concerning what he learns what wilkes booth learned from john brown in the speech john brown case before the court and on his way to being executed if booth had been willing to take that final step, he could have prepared a speech,
brown together? >> booth was an actor and he left to go witnessed the execution of john brown but he looked at john brown, obviously he detested john brown stood for, a white supremacist and hated abolitionists but he was struck by john brown, they were there so eventually john brooks booth of the center, it was ironic a lot of southerners had much more positive things to say about john, they demonized him but admired under pressure, there is a thing about southern honor so i think john...
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Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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, and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find someone overdosing when they do they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts have a name for him. look up and this guy, it's a bird supply. no, it just me. no, okay. and on this order, man, a, this was a brief. it was then from ornell brown, a recovered heroin addict, the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost 7 prisoner of that war. i'm a cavity from that war. a war against addiction that plays out in this streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g 0, chicago. unless speak to dr. edwin chapman about this, he's a board certified addiction specialist and he's joining us live from zoom from washington dc. thank you very much for being with us dr. chapman. the appealing crisis has affected the us as a whole, of course, but i wanted to know what cities and communities ha
, and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find someone overdosing when they do they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts have a name for him. look up and this guy, it's a bird supply. no, it just me. no, okay. and on this order, man, a, this was a brief. it was then from ornell brown, a recovered heroin addict, the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many...
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Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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every day on chicago's west side, john, right morning brown and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find someone overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times. the addict have a name for him. look up in the sky, it's the birds, the play? no or just me, nor can on the sooner man a does was a repo, was there for more know brown, a recovered heroine, attic. the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. are take this very personal, very pros, kazama survivor, prisoner of their war on mcnelty from that war. a war against addiction that plays out in the streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g, 0, chicago. or coming up on this news hour from london, an approaching storm threatens cleanup efforts after an oil leak that's closed, the beach is south of los angeles warnings that sudan is running out of vital medicine fuel and wheat because protest her as of shock bound por
every day on chicago's west side, john, right morning brown and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find someone overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times. the addict have a name for him. look up in the sky, it's the birds, the play? no or just me, nor can on the sooner man a does was a repo, was there for more know brown, a recovered heroine, attic. the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own...
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Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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and on this go to remain a dozen people was then from ornell brown, a recovered heroine, attic. the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost of auburn, prisoner of that war on mackenzie from that war, a war against addiction that plays out in the streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g 0, chicago. ah . so again, i'm fully battle with the headlines on al jazeera u. n. investigation says all sides in libya, conflicts have committed violations that may include war crimes, the report details, accounts of murder, torture, enslavement and rape. it says, migraines and detainees suffrage. the most.
and on this go to remain a dozen people was then from ornell brown, a recovered heroine, attic. the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost of auburn, prisoner of that war on mackenzie from that war, a war against addiction that plays out in the streets of every american city in cities around the...
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Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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every day on chicago's west side, john wright more nel brown and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts, and often find someone overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts have a name for him. look up in his god, it's a bird to play. no, it just me. no, okay. and on this order made this was a repo was then for mar, nell brown, a recovered heroine, attic. the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost of auburn prisoner of that war. i'm a casualty from that war. a war against the diction that plays out in this streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g, 0, chicago, to american scientists have been awarded this. he has no been price for medicine. david julius and odd impact of 14 were a single dot for their discovery from receptors for temperature and touch. and nobel committee secretary general, call the
every day on chicago's west side, john wright more nel brown and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts, and often find someone overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts have a name for him. look up in his god, it's a bird to play. no, it just me. no, okay. and on this order made this was a repo was then for mar, nell brown, a recovered heroine, attic. the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own...
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Oct 20, 2021
10/21
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jeffrey brown has this story, for our arts and culture series, "canvas." >> brown: it's not everyday you get a tuba demonstration. >> i take a deep breath... ♪ ♪ ♪ ...and sometimes, i like to have fun, which means i like to do multi-phonics... ♪ ♪ ♪ ...which is singing in the tuba. >> brown: especially one like this. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> and then i like to add a little beat-box to it. ♪ ♪ ♪ and you put it all together. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: now, is that in the classical repertoire? ( laughs ) >> not yet. but i'm working on it. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: richard antoine white is a classical musician. he's principal tubist for the santa fe symphony and the new mexico philharmonic. and if he hasn't yet brought beat-boxing to the tradition, he has brought an inspiring personal story. >> if you look at my life, my entire life, it was a long st for me to be successful. against all odds, i am possible, taking the word "impossible" and turning it into "i am possible." >> brown: and that's what he's titled his new memoir, "i'm possible: a story of survival, a tuba, and the small miracl
jeffrey brown has this story, for our arts and culture series, "canvas." >> brown: it's not everyday you get a tuba demonstration. >> i take a deep breath... ♪ ♪ ♪ ...and sometimes, i like to have fun, which means i like to do multi-phonics... ♪ ♪ ♪ ...which is singing in the tuba. >> brown: especially one like this. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> and then i like to add a little beat-box to it. ♪ ♪ ♪ and you put it all together. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown:...
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12
Oct 5, 2021
10/21
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and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find someone overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts have a name for him. look up in the sky, it's a bird to play. no, it just me. nor can, on the sooner man does was a repo was than for mar, nell brown, a recovered heroine, attic the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost of auburn prisoner of that war. i'm a casualty from that war. a war against addiction that plays out in the streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g 0, chicago, aggregation industry ladies have pledged to ensure net 0 carbon emissions by 2050 weeks ahead of global climate talks in glasgow. the move is being opposed by chinese airlines. the impact of the pandemic was also discussed at the international and transport associations. annual general meeting. gabrielle alexander
and his brother, kevin brown patrol for addicts and often find someone overdosing when they do, they administer. nor can kevin has done it so many times, the addicts have a name for him. look up in the sky, it's a bird to play. no, it just me. nor can, on the sooner man does was a repo was than for mar, nell brown, a recovered heroine, attic the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is...
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Oct 15, 2021
10/21
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jeffrey brown talked with questlove recent, for our arts and culture series, "canvas." ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: the musicians? some all-time greats. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the music? lifting you to the sky. the setting? the harlem cultural festival, in 1969. all of it-- stunning and amazing to see, and in 2021. but even more mind-blowing? how close it came to being lost forever. the moment you saw what happened here, you knew you were on to something? this was something big? >> absolutely, yeah. and even to be here and to see this structure? like, i definitely remember this shot. >> brown: the renowned musician ahmir thompson, better known as questlove, made his directorial debut this year with the acclaimed documentary "summer of soul." but when we met recently in marcus garvey park, the site of the original concerts 52 years ago-- when it was still called mount morris park-- he told me he hesitated to take on the project when first shown the archival footage. >> i was just like, no, this is too much responsibility. like, this is not just putting a concert together. this is correcting histor
jeffrey brown talked with questlove recent, for our arts and culture series, "canvas." ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brown: the musicians? some all-time greats. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the music? lifting you to the sky. the setting? the harlem cultural festival, in 1969. all of it-- stunning and amazing to see, and in 2021. but even more mind-blowing? how close it came to being lost forever. the moment you saw what happened here, you knew you were on to something? this was something big?...
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7.0
Oct 10, 2021
10/21
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but i think that there may be more to do for the institutions that were serving black and brown students as these institutions were keeping them out there is some responsibility in order to help prop them up because the institutions are still doing remarkable work to educate that student population. as i mentioned, in a place like oklahoma, the public college, the land-grant institution, they have a black enrollment of something like 1450 students. putting that enrollment in context, the university of oklahoma and oklahoma state university combined only had a couple hundred more than at langston university and to 40,000 enrollment combined so thinking about those institutions for particularly the request to think about ways to help other institutions and this is also the other thing on that point. i had a conversation a couple of years ago where she talked about universities as sort of truth telling and one of the functions universities don't tell the truth and just become another corrupt institution that deserves so as the institutions are going through that work of uncovering the histo
but i think that there may be more to do for the institutions that were serving black and brown students as these institutions were keeping them out there is some responsibility in order to help prop them up because the institutions are still doing remarkable work to educate that student population. as i mentioned, in a place like oklahoma, the public college, the land-grant institution, they have a black enrollment of something like 1450 students. putting that enrollment in context, the...
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5.0
Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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brown, a recovered heroine, attic, the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost of auburn prisoner of that war on mccallski from that war. a war against addiction that plays out in the streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g 0, chicago. the world's largest association of airline says it's aiming for the aviation industry to reach net, sara carbon emissions by 2015. the international air transport association met in boston on monday. it's 1st to impose and gathering since the start of the pandemic . the group is counting heavily on carbon offsets, as well as the use of sustainable fuels and new plane technologies. delegates also discussed ways to make up for the economic losses suffered during the pandemic. gabriel alessandro is in boston at the i to amazing. he says the consensus amongst delegates is cautious. optimism after a tough 2 years
brown, a recovered heroine, attic, the culpability of opioid manufacturers is personal. he says he can't escape his own responsibility for past drug use. with that for many addiction is aided and abetted by the industry. i take this very personal, very person, because almost of auburn prisoner of that war on mccallski from that war. a war against addiction that plays out in the streets of every american city in cities around the globe. john henderson, l g 0, chicago. the world's largest...
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9.0
Oct 2, 2021
10/21
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i mean on the sun brown, those are darmesh. yeah. darcy here. more film. it doesn't immediate. if them as a juliana jang was almost like the hat. my jang. but a batch or you can am. yes sir. catherine assured me that you know, she know of his 1st sunday, m. c. o miss gab with he fillmore me. i'm on a danger, but in messiah in that room, refund me key. but also i need jungle police between the shack. android enough on a storm, and yolanda baker as yet troy come back by some vanessa drago bahati as you could put on on bad offer for the sean, but us on that amount. the car. good, ohio neosha, but he kept as noise to follow, but when i'm at the moment, is that a mark, donna? how should i be hall? i'm already go. you hope that it that he jen? tom mooney, marisol. yeah. florida z to published by asked she could mix at that still you think ish, one of my boys did a bit of a stop to kind of go to dd that joe mel mac joe not a big and i will make that one's bigger. oh, send that. yeah, but i was just gonna do cornish how much out by that is more that is call. i could have bigger, you kn
i mean on the sun brown, those are darmesh. yeah. darcy here. more film. it doesn't immediate. if them as a juliana jang was almost like the hat. my jang. but a batch or you can am. yes sir. catherine assured me that you know, she know of his 1st sunday, m. c. o miss gab with he fillmore me. i'm on a danger, but in messiah in that room, refund me key. but also i need jungle police between the shack. android enough on a storm, and yolanda baker as yet troy come back by some vanessa drago bahati...
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8.0
Oct 8, 2021
10/21
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." >> brown: one man-- bill t. jones-- roams an enormous space, telling a story of himself and his country. >> brutality. police. the horrors. unspeakable. >> brown: he's joined by a small group of dancers, who enact and move through that story. and then, by some 90 others, members of the larger community, filling the space, moving as a crowd. >> i know. >> brown: adding their own stories as individuals. it's called "deep blue sea." >> the piece is about the pursuit of the "we." >> brown: pursuit of the we? >> it's thrown around all the time. "we the people." "we shall overcome." politicians use it all the time, this "we." who is this "we" that you're talking about, considering how fractious our country is and how it has been from the beginning? >> brown: jones has used dance to ask big questions of himself and others since the 1980s, when he and his partner in life and dance, arnie zane, first formed a company. even as their fame grew, their world was devastated by aids, which would take the life of zane in 1988 a
." >> brown: one man-- bill t. jones-- roams an enormous space, telling a story of himself and his country. >> brutality. police. the horrors. unspeakable. >> brown: he's joined by a small group of dancers, who enact and move through that story. and then, by some 90 others, members of the larger community, filling the space, moving as a crowd. >> i know. >> brown: adding their own stories as individuals. it's called "deep blue sea." >> the...
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Oct 30, 2021
10/21
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it is so much easier to pitch black and brown -- pit black and brown, and that's what they want. i refuse to accept that. host: let's talk to todd, calling from watsonville, california. caller: good morning. i was wondering if your guest would answer a question. if the immigrants coming to the united states come from countries that have systemic corruption in their government, if that leaks into our government here, because they have had multiple generations of living under corrupt governments. how that affects the united states government? thank you. guest: we are the biggest exporter of corruption in latin america. so i would turn that question around. look at the monro doctrine, look at the united fruit company, which was an actual company created in the united states to go and exploit bananas in places like guatemala and honduras. they literally ran the country. they literally picked their leaders. there was no democracy in central america back in the day. the united states, particularly in central america, has been deeply involved and influenced those countries so much. so i
it is so much easier to pitch black and brown -- pit black and brown, and that's what they want. i refuse to accept that. host: let's talk to todd, calling from watsonville, california. caller: good morning. i was wondering if your guest would answer a question. if the immigrants coming to the united states come from countries that have systemic corruption in their government, if that leaks into our government here, because they have had multiple generations of living under corrupt governments....
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2.0
Oct 14, 2021
10/21
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if you are in a black or brown community or a black or brown kid you'll get the rug pulled out from under you. this is what chris christie proposed in the spring 2016 this is us versus them with enormous progress being made and black and brown communities we have the number one public education system in america but we don't have the equity that we need but that progress is undeniable. [applause] >> do i get a rebuttal because of the criticism? >> t14 it's interesting talk about the black and brown community and his 40 years in office he is not approved a single charter school for the city where the two thirds of the residents want charter schools. [cheers and applause] if we want to get into the weeds with my formula it's not the flat funding formula chris christie proposed that mine well. he is not approved a single charter school nor would they want them. the mac we have to move on. >> setting aside $40 million of left over care is money to help undocumented immigrants but they say that's not enough. after the pandemic why haven't you done more to give undocumented families financial r
if you are in a black or brown community or a black or brown kid you'll get the rug pulled out from under you. this is what chris christie proposed in the spring 2016 this is us versus them with enormous progress being made and black and brown communities we have the number one public education system in america but we don't have the equity that we need but that progress is undeniable. [applause] >> do i get a rebuttal because of the criticism? >> t14 it's interesting talk about the...
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2.0
Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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. >> next, congressman anthony brown and former senator doug jones, talks about white supremacy law enforcement and the military with the center for american progress. they also look at what congress can do to address the issue. >> thank you so much danielle, it's a pleasure to be here today for someone to introduce both of our panelists. starting with senator jones, welcome former u.s. senator from
. >> next, congressman anthony brown and former senator doug jones, talks about white supremacy law enforcement and the military with the center for american progress. they also look at what congress can do to address the issue. >> thank you so much danielle, it's a pleasure to be here today for someone to introduce both of our panelists. starting with senator jones, welcome former u.s. senator from
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22
Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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joe biden became president of the united states because of black and brown vote. the reason you have the senate is not because of individuals who were tired of donald trump in georgia. voters came out throughout the state of georgia. so when you talk about why he got there, i mean, there is the frustration and you hear this frustration being palpable the issue such as -- listen, you can call it transformational, call it too big, call it whatever you want, but passing voting rights and passing things like criminal justice reform, they are not too big. that's -- that's what in country needs. that's -- that's how we heal this country. and so that along with what we're talking about in the transportation bill and the build back better plan are all necessary. but the problem is, i mean, to your point, to your point, congressman, this is the fact. he hasn't passed any of those. and because he hasn't even passed one of those, he is stuck in a rut today. >> but the black and brown voters are on the conservative end of the democratic party. they are not -- most of all, the
joe biden became president of the united states because of black and brown vote. the reason you have the senate is not because of individuals who were tired of donald trump in georgia. voters came out throughout the state of georgia. so when you talk about why he got there, i mean, there is the frustration and you hear this frustration being palpable the issue such as -- listen, you can call it transformational, call it too big, call it whatever you want, but passing voting rights and passing...
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6.0
Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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i should say with the great depression, i talked about the start of the book the unthinkable molly brown and resident at the very beginning. she dies and is surrounded by flappers who she hates even though she does relate in many ways. but they were flappers in the 1920s and in the same way that all these ambitious women took a nosedive in the deep depression even more so in the case of black women and i talk about that in the book. she's let in and felt she was fine and one of the delights and early on i received an interesting one. who is actually friends with barbara chase and she lived at the hotel from 1917 to 1972 so probably a bit later. that's what i sort of write about in the book in terms of how barbara chase fits in even as society may be says she doesn't, she has a particular kind of attitude and so this is absolutely true. yes of course you had racism around you, but she felt comfortable because she had a particular point of view about herself as a woman and that she said made her fit in and feel comfortable. these questions are complex and felt incredibly comfortable so it'
i should say with the great depression, i talked about the start of the book the unthinkable molly brown and resident at the very beginning. she dies and is surrounded by flappers who she hates even though she does relate in many ways. but they were flappers in the 1920s and in the same way that all these ambitious women took a nosedive in the deep depression even more so in the case of black women and i talk about that in the book. she's let in and felt she was fine and one of the delights and...
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but when that technology is 8 and 81 percent unpaid mobile lot was black and brown gay. then i think there's some good morning to be done. is it like the kodak here? why are we going to wait 30 years? kodak to be good for bracken brown. skin, some it is smooth out, should be but everybody do except sandra is right that we need to have my make sure this provision there as well, and it has to work for every child. i'm a 100 percent in favor of that, but it's coming lunch. well, come the new technology that stopped being so blooming, paranoid, you've got personal data very much at the forefront of this. and as we well know, it's big business. you know, it sells for a lot of money. facebook and tell you that. shouldn't we concerned about how the tech company running the tells plans to use the data? we don't know how they are regulating it. i think it is a good place to test to actually a, in something as innocuous as their children get in their school meals. but obviously we need to know where that date has been, how, how it's been held on what is being used for. i accept th
but when that technology is 8 and 81 percent unpaid mobile lot was black and brown gay. then i think there's some good morning to be done. is it like the kodak here? why are we going to wait 30 years? kodak to be good for bracken brown. skin, some it is smooth out, should be but everybody do except sandra is right that we need to have my make sure this provision there as well, and it has to work for every child. i'm a 100 percent in favor of that, but it's coming lunch. well, come the new...
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Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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he won those black and brown voters -- hang on. let me finish. he won because those black and brown voters, as charlie said, thought that he would stabilize the country, that he would be able to compromise and work with republicans and pull his party together and the country together as well because in order to get 82 million people when you have african-americans -- >> no. >> hang on. when you have 82 million people voting for a president, most of the people who voted for him are quite frankly white americans although black and brown people pushed him over the finish line. >> let's back up a little bit because we're forgetting where we were just last summer. like in 2020, people didn't take to the streets. we were all there. we witnessed them taking to the streets. we didn't take to the streets and then vote in outrageous numbers in the middle of a pandemic for something less than transformative. so when i'm talking about justice issues, i don't necessarily think that we're saying different things here. but what i am saying, though, is that you
he won those black and brown voters -- hang on. let me finish. he won because those black and brown voters, as charlie said, thought that he would stabilize the country, that he would be able to compromise and work with republicans and pull his party together and the country together as well because in order to get 82 million people when you have african-americans -- >> no. >> hang on. when you have 82 million people voting for a president, most of the people who voted for him are...
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14
Oct 2, 2021
10/21
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i live in the district represented by william has brown -- by william brown who has a heart condition and is still running. is that district gerrymandered? my third point, because it is totally gerrymandered. he lives in patterson and they skipped so many times to get to englewood which is heavily democratic. i bet she won't say anything about that. host: go ahead and respond, susan. guest: first, on your point that liberals don't love the country, i think liberals do love the country. i personally do. and i love the state of new jersey because that is where i am from. on the issues you're referring to, especially gerrymandering, i don't think anybody who wants a fair election believes that gerrymandering is a good thing, especially when it is discriminatory or it seeks to deprive a good part of the population proper leadership they want. i think with the freedom to vote act does is protect against extreme behavior and discriminatory behavior. i can understand being very angry about the fact that maybe somebody has been able to hold the seat for many years. is it from gerrymandering?
i live in the district represented by william has brown -- by william brown who has a heart condition and is still running. is that district gerrymandered? my third point, because it is totally gerrymandered. he lives in patterson and they skipped so many times to get to englewood which is heavily democratic. i bet she won't say anything about that. host: go ahead and respond, susan. guest: first, on your point that liberals don't love the country, i think liberals do love the country. i...
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Oct 11, 2021
10/21
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these are-- so between gains fisher and mclaurin, these are really some the building blocks of the brown v board decision so if you are thinking about the gains case, think about the fact that they didn't even have a separate institution where he could attend in estate. they were sending black students out of state and that had its own repercussions for the institutions they attended so in kentucky they said appropriate $5000 to send black students out of state for graduate education but we will also take $5000 from our hbcus budget and then ultimately won't spend the full $5000 to send it students out of state, so i think it was about moving his story behind it simply the case law and understanding that the people who are involved in these fights , it takes a personal toll on p them as well. you talk about the letters he wrote to his mom and this was the last time he ever spoke to a member of his family, you know i am just a man. i'm not a man who has spot for this cause, no, i'm just a man and he said sometimes i wish no one ever knew my name. it really speaks to the difficulty they we
these are-- so between gains fisher and mclaurin, these are really some the building blocks of the brown v board decision so if you are thinking about the gains case, think about the fact that they didn't even have a separate institution where he could attend in estate. they were sending black students out of state and that had its own repercussions for the institutions they attended so in kentucky they said appropriate $5000 to send black students out of state for graduate education but we...
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3.0
Oct 17, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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it is not one 100% if it were one 100% you never have brown versus board of education. that's what i thought then that's what i think now. >> what is that part that you think now? >> i know you like me too go into incredible detail describing my views or other people's views at there's one thing i am not supposed to do is lie. [laughter] >> going to talk about 1994. confirmed by about 87 -- nine. the last confirmation we had was on a strict party line vote you think that would take. >> first remember this, the confirmation process is a political process. i give a lot of reasons and that book one or two of which there are several reasons in the book, what the word politics might mean as applied to a court which very different from the senate or the house for eight staff person for some time. one thing i learned, i learned a lot in that. that's important to me and it remained important to me. one of the things i learned as an might confirmation or somebody else's you give a speech. i will stay here for 15 minutes after this is over and you can say anything you would like,
it is not one 100% if it were one 100% you never have brown versus board of education. that's what i thought then that's what i think now. >> what is that part that you think now? >> i know you like me too go into incredible detail describing my views or other people's views at there's one thing i am not supposed to do is lie. [laughter] >> going to talk about 1994. confirmed by about 87 -- nine. the last confirmation we had was on a strict party line vote you think that would...
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Oct 6, 2021
10/21
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LINKTV
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juan: i want to ask about the aftermath of the michael brown killing back in 2014. arguably a key flashpoint in the development of the black lives matter movement. seven years later, what do you make of whatever reforms, changes occurred in ferguson and with the ferguson police department? derecka: they are an organization still fighting to put pressure on the ferguson police department to implement weak reforms that came as a result of the consent decree that was put in place under the obama administration. seven years, you have people in ferguson still fighting to eliminate cases of people who have outstanding warrants for nearly a decade ago. you have a few black elected officials in ferguson now, which i think could be a step forward because many of them are trying to figure out how to reduce the level of violence, but the police are still there to serve the purpose of policing, enforcing evictions, taking in people who live in that community, doing it may be more nicely, maybe more brown people are doing it, but the day-to-day function of the ferguson police de
juan: i want to ask about the aftermath of the michael brown killing back in 2014. arguably a key flashpoint in the development of the black lives matter movement. seven years later, what do you make of whatever reforms, changes occurred in ferguson and with the ferguson police department? derecka: they are an organization still fighting to put pressure on the ferguson police department to implement weak reforms that came as a result of the consent decree that was put in place under the obama...
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8.0
Oct 11, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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tonight professor cashin willing joined by tamiko brown nagen, professor of constitution law and history of arts and sciences. author of the courage to defend atlanta and long history of civil rights movement. they will be discussing professor cashin's book. henry louis calls it brilliant and nuance. convinces the reader of geography and economic and social inequality. we are so happy to have them both here tonight, so without further due, the digital podium is sincerely yours, dean brown-nagen and professor cashin. >> thank you so much, hillary, and thank you for the harvard bookstore for hosting the talk. it is my pleasure to be in conversation with sheryll cashin who has written her fifth book and i want to start off, sheryll by asking you why did you decide to write this book? >> part of it as you know is your thought -- [laughter] >> 4 years ago, 5 years ago i got a call from you asking me if i would like to give a bit of a lecture at my alma mater, harvard law school and i was flattered and flabbergasted thinking what would i say at this institution where a lot of my professors are
tonight professor cashin willing joined by tamiko brown nagen, professor of constitution law and history of arts and sciences. author of the courage to defend atlanta and long history of civil rights movement. they will be discussing professor cashin's book. henry louis calls it brilliant and nuance. convinces the reader of geography and economic and social inequality. we are so happy to have them both here tonight, so without further due, the digital podium is sincerely yours, dean brown-nagen...
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43
Oct 10, 2021
10/21
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brown customers for their best financial products. so there are things the private sector can do, but as i said last summer, when i saw these dollars, i thought, and statements in support of black lives matter, i thought it was bs and basically that washington post deep dive proves me right. >> phillip, i'm curious if you agree, and if we are looking to the private sector to address some of these issues, what are the metrics for success? how do we know if these things are working or not? >> yeah. i think if we're looking to the private sector to fix the issues, we already failed. no need to measure anything. i mean, as my friend michael tubs like to say, charity is not justice. you shouldn't get a go fund me account for your daughter's cancer treatment, and we shouldn't get the excesses of corporate capitalism to bail out systems that were never designed to help black people in the first place. when we talk about philanthropy as if that's supposed to be the path forward, it's as if we need to give up that the systems that we build sho
brown customers for their best financial products. so there are things the private sector can do, but as i said last summer, when i saw these dollars, i thought, and statements in support of black lives matter, i thought it was bs and basically that washington post deep dive proves me right. >> phillip, i'm curious if you agree, and if we are looking to the private sector to address some of these issues, what are the metrics for success? how do we know if these things are working or not?...
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10.0
Oct 2, 2021
10/21
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i know what this means for black people and brown people and people with low incomes. today, i share for the first time publicly, a very difficult personal story and hope it will destigmatize accessing abortion care. i am sharing my story even though i truly believe is personal and nobody's business. certainly, not the business of politicians. i am compelled to speak out because of the real risks of the clock being turned back to the days before roe v. wade. in the days when i was a teenager and had a back alley abortion in mexico. i was raised in el paso, texas and attended catholic school. growing up, sex education was nonexistent adolescent, and repetitive health were not discussed in a meaningful way and because of that, i was not sure how you got pregnant. most of what i learned about sex and relationships were from pages of magazines and hearsay from my peers. i lived in a loving extended family household with my parents and grandparents who wanted me to make straight a's, practice the piano day and night and of course, stay away from boys. after grammar school,
i know what this means for black people and brown people and people with low incomes. today, i share for the first time publicly, a very difficult personal story and hope it will destigmatize accessing abortion care. i am sharing my story even though i truly believe is personal and nobody's business. certainly, not the business of politicians. i am compelled to speak out because of the real risks of the clock being turned back to the days before roe v. wade. in the days when i was a teenager...
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Oct 1, 2021
10/21
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CNBC
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brown's is a cream soda. >> which i like. black cherry, my favorite. >> fine. now i'm thinking about katz's deli you distracted my whole spiel. the delta variant of the virus peaked two months ago and we are two months behind them and it's the same playbook. we know that we're not out of the woods with the virus, but what we also know is the fed is out of excuses to start removing stimulus a little bit at a time, obviously. we look at the inflation data and it's a 30-year high with cpi and we know this the market is reacting very well to that. that is a very, very good sign the market is no longer panicking over this idea of coming out of emergency stimulus and all of those stocks i just ran down for you, that is what we want to see that price action to me is very bullish and we're getting that spirituality we need back. we believe in the recovery and the stocks are signaling that. >> the biggest issue, though of what you said, i think it was yesterday when you were with us or it was the day before forgive me if it was that and i can't remember exactly which on
brown's is a cream soda. >> which i like. black cherry, my favorite. >> fine. now i'm thinking about katz's deli you distracted my whole spiel. the delta variant of the virus peaked two months ago and we are two months behind them and it's the same playbook. we know that we're not out of the woods with the virus, but what we also know is the fed is out of excuses to start removing stimulus a little bit at a time, obviously. we look at the inflation data and it's a 30-year high with...
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Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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coming up, windy schiller, brown university professor of political science. equity futures down 13 on the s&p. this is bloomberg. ♪ maria: with the first word news --leigh-ann: with the first word news, i am leigh-ann gerrans. progressives have opened the door to compromise. they have offered to scale back some of the more ambitious social spending by having those programs expire rather than become permanent. they rejected senator joe manchin's offer to cut the $3.5 trillion package to $1.5 trillion. the biden administration will directly engage with china in the next few days to enforce commitments in a trade deal. at the same time, it will start a new process to exclude certain products from u.s. tariffs. one u.s. officials says china may not change its trade practices, and the u.s. needs a strategy that takes that into account. opec and its allies are signaling that they are more likely to let the oil price rally round than cool it off. delegates are indicating they are in no rush to increase supplies faster. tesla is inflicting more pain on short-seller
coming up, windy schiller, brown university professor of political science. equity futures down 13 on the s&p. this is bloomberg. ♪ maria: with the first word news --leigh-ann: with the first word news, i am leigh-ann gerrans. progressives have opened the door to compromise. they have offered to scale back some of the more ambitious social spending by having those programs expire rather than become permanent. they rejected senator joe manchin's offer to cut the $3.5 trillion package to...
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Oct 21, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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. >> then, senator sherrod brown what might survive in the build back better bill and should leaders who knowingly let covid run ripped through their country, killing hundreds of thousands be charged with crimes against humanity. it's happening in for sale, so why not hear. all in, starts right now. good evening from new york, i'm chris hayes. in the most prominent liberal democracies around the world. election day is on a weekend, germany, france, sweden, belgium, japan, italy. the other countries they cast their ballots on solid saturday or sunday, when a lot of people have their day off and have an easier time getting to the polling. pretty straightforward idea. notably israel and south korea both we vote on weekdays but election day is a public holiday. celebration of voting and the democratic process itself, i think it's a pretty nice idea. for the purposes of civic morale but also because in voting is something we do as citizens, and it can be time consuming and people have busy schedules, and it should be the general public interest to be a make that process as easy as possibl
. >> then, senator sherrod brown what might survive in the build back better bill and should leaders who knowingly let covid run ripped through their country, killing hundreds of thousands be charged with crimes against humanity. it's happening in for sale, so why not hear. all in, starts right now. good evening from new york, i'm chris hayes. in the most prominent liberal democracies around the world. election day is on a weekend, germany, france, sweden, belgium, japan, italy. the other...
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4.0
Oct 13, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN
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eye 4
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i was a brown girl in a black-and-white world. every day my family faced stairs, whispers, suspicion, and exclusion. but then, something very american happened. the community looked beyond skin color. they got away with hard-working people who shared their values, and those stairs started his smiles. those whispers started to words of friendship. we went from being left out to being welcomed in. not every day was great, nearly every day was better than the one before it. i have not just seen the american story, i have lived the american story, and take it from me, the first female and first minority governor of south carolina, america is not a racist country. [applause] this is a story it republicans should tell and it is a story republicans should finish. the moral mandate to make america freer, fairer and better. . there are a lot of wrongs to write. there is an education system that failed to many students. a welfare system that traps to many in poverty. health care system that is too costly and bureaucratic. there is a crime w
i was a brown girl in a black-and-white world. every day my family faced stairs, whispers, suspicion, and exclusion. but then, something very american happened. the community looked beyond skin color. they got away with hard-working people who shared their values, and those stairs started his smiles. those whispers started to words of friendship. we went from being left out to being welcomed in. not every day was great, nearly every day was better than the one before it. i have not just seen...
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Oct 29, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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they're against anything that's about black and brown people and lgbt people being equal. they don't want to hear that? >> well, you know, the problem is this. our side tends to take some time to think things through. we don't rush to judgment. we don't believe lies. but we are up against an organized faction that has created big lies out of the election, big lies out of the notion of voter fraud, big lies out of the notions of the environment and because, i mean, as your earlier segment pointed out, people are used to this diet. so it's easy to district people from what is really happening and force them to be express themselves as people with grievances, i think many people really believe it because they're used to listening to this stuff. the ones that don't believe it are the christophers that know what they're going after is not the course critical race theory. they're going after critical ideas about race and our american society and it is, it is time, joy, for our constituents to be apprised of the fact this is basically taking away our heritage, taking away the cou
they're against anything that's about black and brown people and lgbt people being equal. they don't want to hear that? >> well, you know, the problem is this. our side tends to take some time to think things through. we don't rush to judgment. we don't believe lies. but we are up against an organized faction that has created big lies out of the election, big lies out of the notion of voter fraud, big lies out of the notions of the environment and because, i mean, as your earlier segment...
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3.0
Oct 24, 2021
10/21
by
ALJAZ
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eye 3
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and i was like only brown is saying, please, please, please, please. i went in to the read the book and it does run a few following meal. been through the question, the rocks couldn't want to run the road. i've been in a coma. ah, i'm saying a big move with question i came up here to stop like i was kind of facing the like the like one of the security cars i went in to call. i was scared like he's that in a okay. that would be the 1st person that he would go to her. i just wanted to let her know, i think over a number it at all. and when she came to have me, she didn't have shoes on and she add marks on her neck problems. marks on her arms. her back was all tore up in her shirt was basically barely hanging on the sleeve was talking. she's like, mom, it was my fault is my fault, am i? it's not your fault. this you for deal? i didn't find charging you semester friends, are going to solve the deadly weapon, domestic violence, kidnapping terrace was arrested and liter charged with 2 felonies. he was ordered not to have any firearms under $7500.00. here to
and i was like only brown is saying, please, please, please, please. i went in to the read the book and it does run a few following meal. been through the question, the rocks couldn't want to run the road. i've been in a coma. ah, i'm saying a big move with question i came up here to stop like i was kind of facing the like the like one of the security cars i went in to call. i was scared like he's that in a okay. that would be the 1st person that he would go to her. i just wanted to let her...
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Oct 3, 2021
10/21
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KPIX
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mckee's third touchdown of the game. 4th and 8, anthony brown scrambling. what can brown do for you? return to sendser. what a huge win for stanford. good guys win it in this one, 31-24 the final. >>> a heart breaker in washington last weekend, wazoo and berkeley today. the one handed haul and the toe tapper. that right there was all washington state would need, 21- 6 wazoo. playing wide receiver last week but he made his first start at quarterback as san jose state hosted new mexico state. gnash finds derek for the td, spartans win 37-31, winner take all tomorrow, the dodgers have the brewers. the giants looking for win number 107, both games are both at the same time so you can keep your eyes on the score board and watch the giants win it. either way dodgers loss, giants let me get this straight. you've got an a.i. strategy to deliver a better customer experience, that will help us retain our customers and even grow our business? how much is this going to cost? here's the figure. 59. 59 million? no, five9. as in five9 intelligent cloud contact center. the
mckee's third touchdown of the game. 4th and 8, anthony brown scrambling. what can brown do for you? return to sendser. what a huge win for stanford. good guys win it in this one, 31-24 the final. >>> a heart breaker in washington last weekend, wazoo and berkeley today. the one handed haul and the toe tapper. that right there was all washington state would need, 21- 6 wazoo. playing wide receiver last week but he made his first start at quarterback as san jose state hosted new mexico...
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Oct 21, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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. >> senator brown on what might survivor in the build back better bill and should leaders who let covid rip through their country be charged with crimes against humanity. it's happening in brazil. why not here? all in starts right now. >>> good evening. countries are considered our peers, election day is on a weekend. germany, france, sweden, belgium, japan, italy. other country cast their ballot on saturday and sunday when a lot of people have the day off. israel and south korea vote on weekdays but election day is a public holiday. voting something we do as citizens and it can be time consuming and people with busy schedules and be in the general public interest to make the process as easy as possible. that's not the case here in the united states. a revolt on weekdays, on tuesdays and do not have the day off. we have this bizarre patch work of rules and regulations spread across 10,000 distingts jurisdictions responsible for managing elections. everything from where and when and how you can vote. it's probably better if there was some standard. seems like setting standards for mail i
. >> senator brown on what might survivor in the build back better bill and should leaders who let covid rip through their country be charged with crimes against humanity. it's happening in brazil. why not here? all in starts right now. >>> good evening. countries are considered our peers, election day is on a weekend. germany, france, sweden, belgium, japan, italy. other country cast their ballot on saturday and sunday when a lot of people have the day off. israel and south...
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6.0
Oct 1, 2021
10/21
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ALJAZ
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eye 6
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the shaming should cool up on the, on, on them it, on the sun brown. those ha ha, dorm ish yet darcia'll. hear more film. it doesn't immediate. if them, as the giuliani jang, both the almost they have. you know, the hat. ma jang. but by choice they, emily had stroke, hadn't shown me that. you know, chino of his 1st sunday, m. c. o miss gerber with he fillmore me. i'm on a danger, but a messiah lou refund me key. last night. he jungle bazookas between the shack majority now on it's donna and yolanda baker. as you joy come back by some vanessa drago bahati as you can put on a bad offer punishment, but some that a month ago. good ohio neosha, but he kept as noise to follow cannon or the moment. as i remarked, dinah, how should i be hall? i'm already call you hall, dad, that he jen tom moment marisol yaki the z to position but she could mix at that still, you think ish, one of my boys did a bit of a stop to kind of tailored to dd that jamal mac. joe, not a big and i will make that one's a big an o sent the job, but i was just going to be the cornish camach
the shaming should cool up on the, on, on them it, on the sun brown. those ha ha, dorm ish yet darcia'll. hear more film. it doesn't immediate. if them, as the giuliani jang, both the almost they have. you know, the hat. ma jang. but by choice they, emily had stroke, hadn't shown me that. you know, chino of his 1st sunday, m. c. o miss gerber with he fillmore me. i'm on a danger, but a messiah lou refund me key. last night. he jungle bazookas between the shack majority now on it's donna and...
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41
Oct 7, 2021
10/21
by
FOXNEWSW
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secondly it's amazing to me how the liberal media can't stand it when someone black or brown happens to talk about the fact that america is the december country in the world. the fact we're blessed to be free and blelsed to live in america. i will keep saying it. we should all talk about the blessings of america. we're not a perfect country. but every day our focus is to make today better than yesterday and that's how i was raised. i was raised to have hope. i was raised that america did have challenges as we were growing but also was raised to live and see that me, a brown family in a small southern rural town, the people when they used to whisper about us or exclude us, i saw something very american happen because they started to smile at us. they started to talk to us and they welcomed us in. and that's the part of america that i was raised in. that's the part of america i'm proud of. and that same state elected me as the first female and first minority governor and you can't say that we're a racist country. you just can't. they can't stand it when a brown republican says that. >>
secondly it's amazing to me how the liberal media can't stand it when someone black or brown happens to talk about the fact that america is the december country in the world. the fact we're blessed to be free and blelsed to live in america. i will keep saying it. we should all talk about the blessings of america. we're not a perfect country. but every day our focus is to make today better than yesterday and that's how i was raised. i was raised to have hope. i was raised that america did have...
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15
Oct 9, 2021
10/21
by
MSNBCW
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person kills an african-american or brown person, they stand a very, very small chance of getting the death penalty. it is when you kill someone white that the death penalty is very likely going to be your sentence. and killing this gentleman, this man, earnest johnson, is like killing a 6-year-old. reverend, i don't even believe he understood when they told him he was going to be put into an electric chair. i don't think he had any knowledge of understanding of what was even happening to him. >> wow. well, congressman, thank you. i remind people, he's not only a congressman, he's one of the best preachers in the morning. i'm preaching at howard, i'm preaching one of your sermons, so don't watch it on facetime. >>> up next, my final thoughts. stay with us. hi, my name is cherrie. i'm 76 and i live on the oregon coast. my husband, sam, we've been married 53 years. we love to walk on the beach. i have two daughters and then two granddaughters. i noticed that memories were not there like they were when i was much younger. since taking prevagen, my memory has gotten better and it's like t
person kills an african-american or brown person, they stand a very, very small chance of getting the death penalty. it is when you kill someone white that the death penalty is very likely going to be your sentence. and killing this gentleman, this man, earnest johnson, is like killing a 6-year-old. reverend, i don't even believe he understood when they told him he was going to be put into an electric chair. i don't think he had any knowledge of understanding of what was even happening to him....