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Apr 6, 2024
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and then there's blanchard. he an abolitionist minister and journalist who traveling around came to gettysburg while stephens was still practice in law there. and i gettysburg while stephens was still practice in law there. and i think helped stephens actually come to the the deep, deep commitment that he had to racial equality for the rest of his and blanchard would end up he wrote about him afterwards he ran a he had his own little newspaper the christian sure and he he idolized thaddeus stevens he once him i think you have done more for the good of people here in this country than anyone else of your time. i just admire i mean just like you walked on water but he kept showing up because stephens lived with lydia and he thought they were living in sin. and he he had other people who confirmed the same thing thing. he bishop did and blanchard but actually go on to be to be president of wheaton college out in illinois and also on an ohio church conference after stevens died, bishop payne was also there and he wa
and then there's blanchard. he an abolitionist minister and journalist who traveling around came to gettysburg while stephens was still practice in law there. and i gettysburg while stephens was still practice in law there. and i think helped stephens actually come to the the deep, deep commitment that he had to racial equality for the rest of his and blanchard would end up he wrote about him afterwards he ran a he had his own little newspaper the christian sure and he he idolized thaddeus...
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Apr 1, 2024
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and then there's blanchard. he an abolitionist minister and journalist who traveling around came to gettysburg while stephens was still practice in law there. and i think helped stephens actually come to the the deep, deep commitment that he had to racial equality for the rest of his and blanchard would end up he wrote about him afterwards he ran a he had his own little newspaper the christian sure and he he idolized thaddeus stevens he once him i think you have done more for the good of people here in this country than anyone else of your time. i just admire i mean just like you walked on water but he kept showing up because stephens lived with lydia and he thought they were living in sin. and he he had other people who confirmed the same thing thing. he bishop did and blanchard but actually go on to be to be president of wheaton college out in illinois and also on an ohio church conference after stevens died, bishop payne was also there and he was a man of color. who stephens likely met in gettysburg. get the
and then there's blanchard. he an abolitionist minister and journalist who traveling around came to gettysburg while stephens was still practice in law there. and i think helped stephens actually come to the the deep, deep commitment that he had to racial equality for the rest of his and blanchard would end up he wrote about him afterwards he ran a he had his own little newspaper the christian sure and he he idolized thaddeus stevens he once him i think you have done more for the good of people...
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Apr 13, 2024
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at the met here in new york, fire shut up in my bones by the grammy award winning trumpeter terence blanchard, made history as the first work by a black composer at the metropolitan opera in 138 years. and now it is back. i went to the met to meet him. most people frankly do not think of black operas, right? african-americans recreating opera. >> it's usually the old white guys, europe, who are the canon and have remained so for several hundred years. >> what would you >> say to people who are just surprised? i mean, it's different opera, right? >> well, the thing is it's not just the composers, but the performance as well as one journalist asked me, he said that you think your app is going to inspire young people to sing opera. and i'm like bro and peopleave red ma singing opera for genetions. people out there whoave e stories to tell. and the thing the thing that i've been saying two and i rely mean this i don't want to a token. wanto be a turnkeyhat needs peoplef other backgrounds, e ethnic bacroun telling stors because th's what the blic, al fl wants see >> don't forget. you cafind all ou
at the met here in new york, fire shut up in my bones by the grammy award winning trumpeter terence blanchard, made history as the first work by a black composer at the metropolitan opera in 138 years. and now it is back. i went to the met to meet him. most people frankly do not think of black operas, right? african-americans recreating opera. >> it's usually the old white guys, europe, who are the canon and have remained so for several hundred years. >> what would you >> say...
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Apr 16, 2024
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special thanks to terence blanchard for being here. tune in tomorrow when
special thanks to terence blanchard for being here. tune in tomorrow when
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Apr 14, 2024
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ambassador jim blanchard and his wife janet. ambassador blanchard is the past chair of, the foundation board. and so we're very, very to see him. the national archives foundation is nonprofit partner of the national archives. we work to generate for the national archives mission to, provide public access to the agency's vast holdings. as part of this effort, the archives foundation is proud to assist the national archives in its national exhibition and public programs. much like tonight's program, this important conversation as well as the national archives, national, civic interactive programs that engage educators and students and the general public to learn about our past and to illuminate the future through. their participation in our republic. we have a wonderful planned for you this evening. celebrating ten years of the david rubenstein fine records of rights gallery david rubenstein is a man who almost no introduction. he is an lawyer, businessman and of course a philanthropist and recently a major league baseball owner.
ambassador jim blanchard and his wife janet. ambassador blanchard is the past chair of, the foundation board. and so we're very, very to see him. the national archives foundation is nonprofit partner of the national archives. we work to generate for the national archives mission to, provide public access to the agency's vast holdings. as part of this effort, the archives foundation is proud to assist the national archives in its national exhibition and public programs. much like tonight's...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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trump lawyer, todd blanchard, we were just discussing, tried to defend the honestly indefensible, making the judge visibly frustrated and when blanche told the judge, quote, this gag order we are trying to comply with the, president trump is being very careful to comply with your honored rules, the judge responded, mr. blanche, you are losing all credibility with this order. cordell served as a judge for nearly 20 years, including on the bench of the superior court of the state of california. she joined me now pick it is great to have you, judge, we love hearing from you. so first, just set the stage point this was, there is a sort of motion to show cause. so the people, the district attorney's office wants to make the case affirmatively to the judge that trump is right now violating his gag order pick so what was the proceeding that started the hearing today? >> so this was a criminal contempt hearing and the burden is on the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt every single element of criminal content, which is there is a ballot order, trump about the order and he willfully v
trump lawyer, todd blanchard, we were just discussing, tried to defend the honestly indefensible, making the judge visibly frustrated and when blanche told the judge, quote, this gag order we are trying to comply with the, president trump is being very careful to comply with your honored rules, the judge responded, mr. blanche, you are losing all credibility with this order. cordell served as a judge for nearly 20 years, including on the bench of the superior court of the state of california....
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Apr 22, 2024
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jack blanchard, do you have some sympathy with the position that the metropolitan police were put in? enormous. police in these big public order protests and situations is incredibly hard. you can imagine at least hours of people, alive, moving event. it's actually something police is very good at in this country. you rarely see the k aortic —— chaotic things on other countries. it's very hard to get every single incident right in the heat of the moment if someone�*s pointing a camera in yourface, and this was actually a long interaction. we've only seen snippets on the news. i do have sympathy. it clearly wasn't handled right, as lots of the politicians had said. some of the language was clearly unacceptable. but it is very hard in the heat of the moment. if you talk to politicians off the camera, there is some sympathy there, that is why you're seeing ultimately a lot of support for the met police commissioner, who has come in relatively new to the job and is trying to turn around a police force that's clearly failing in many ways. police force that's clearly failing in many w
jack blanchard, do you have some sympathy with the position that the metropolitan police were put in? enormous. police in these big public order protests and situations is incredibly hard. you can imagine at least hours of people, alive, moving event. it's actually something police is very good at in this country. you rarely see the k aortic —— chaotic things on other countries. it's very hard to get every single incident right in the heat of the moment if someone�*s pointing a camera in...
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Apr 22, 2024
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let me bring in our panel to stop victoria coates, usso jack blanchard, politico's uk editor at large. good to have you with us. jack, let me start with you. do you think it will go through tonight? i think it will go through tonight? i mean, that is the expectation. but as you know, the british parliamentary system has its quirks and there is nothing more quirky than the house of lords. it is a very hard place to predict. it is hard to convince these unelected peers to do what you want when the government, it is hard to whip them and corral them down the voting chamber. but there is this tradition in britain that in the end to the house of lords does give way to the will of the house of the comments. it accepts it as an unelected chamber compared to the elected house of commons, so, yes, i do think at some point tradition dictates that this will happen. but whether that is ten o'clock, ii whether that is ten o'clock, 11 o'clock, three o'clock in the morning, we will have to wait and see. �* morning, we will have to wait and see. . ., morning, we will have to wait and see. �* ., .
let me bring in our panel to stop victoria coates, usso jack blanchard, politico's uk editor at large. good to have you with us. jack, let me start with you. do you think it will go through tonight? i think it will go through tonight? i mean, that is the expectation. but as you know, the british parliamentary system has its quirks and there is nothing more quirky than the house of lords. it is a very hard place to predict. it is hard to convince these unelected peers to do what you want when...
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Apr 23, 2024
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for as accomplished an attorney tom blanchard is, i don't understand the argument he made. to have a judge tell you that you are losing credibility this early in a trial is really, really dangerous ground to operate on. if anything, i would have expected him to walk in there with a plan presented and ready that was going to somehow allow the judge to make a decision that perhaps didn't ding his client on everything. but also allows his client to move forward while preserving the integrity of these proceedings, and he didn't. and that's something that i don't necessarily know is going to be easy to overlook going forward, because donald trump is not changing who he is. so you can expect we'll have this issue again, and it's going to get very costly for donald trump or difficult for todd blanch, if not both. >> everything that trump touches turns to kaka. >> on the political end of that, part of this that i try to remind myself that i'm still covering the presumptive nominee for 2024, part of this is that donald trump, outside of this criminal trial, hasn't faced political re
for as accomplished an attorney tom blanchard is, i don't understand the argument he made. to have a judge tell you that you are losing credibility this early in a trial is really, really dangerous ground to operate on. if anything, i would have expected him to walk in there with a plan presented and ready that was going to somehow allow the judge to make a decision that perhaps didn't ding his client on everything. but also allows his client to move forward while preserving the integrity of...