0
0.0
Feb 7, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
mississippi mississippi republicans use the language of invasion and great replacement theory. but, look, invasion in the constitution means invasion during an act of war by a foreign nation or narks from -- snarks from within. i direct your attention to federalist paper 43. the entry migrants of escaping crisis for a better life is not invasion. i now yield -- i reserve. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves. the gentleman from tennessee. mr. green: i yield two minutes to the gentleman from texas, chairman arrington. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. arrington: just a comment about this not being an invasion. no honest or objective american from sea to shining sea could characterize what is happening at our southern border as an invasion and destroying our country and because of the willful neglect and the dereliction of duty and because of the faithlessness to this constitution and first job to provide a common defense. i thank chairman green for restoring the dignity and integrity of the impeachment process. i think it is important that we a
mississippi mississippi republicans use the language of invasion and great replacement theory. but, look, invasion in the constitution means invasion during an act of war by a foreign nation or narks from -- snarks from within. i direct your attention to federalist paper 43. the entry migrants of escaping crisis for a better life is not invasion. i now yield -- i reserve. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves. the gentleman from tennessee. mr. green: i yield two minutes to the...
0
0.0
Feb 28, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
he says "my family is from grnwood, mississippi. remember my mother sang black people were forced to watch lynchings. that he says that medgar evers was a hero and a warrior." guest: he cap expressing his first lynching, a gentleman named mr. tingle, drive-thru -- was kidnapped, drove through the streets, and shot. his clothes were left hung up in this fairgrounds for a year. the clan dared any black person to remove them because they wanted black people to know he had allegedly assessed a white woman and they wouldn't like people to know this is your place and if you displease us, you can be killed. black folks during that era, not only in mississippi but per capita more than any other state have the most lynchings. gloria was number three -- florida was number three. it was a reign of terror. you were afraid of how you spoke to a white person, man, woman, or child. you could be lynched for anything. restrained to vote, joining the naacp, looking at a white person in the wrong way, speaking to them in a way that in like, not get of
he says "my family is from grnwood, mississippi. remember my mother sang black people were forced to watch lynchings. that he says that medgar evers was a hero and a warrior." guest: he cap expressing his first lynching, a gentleman named mr. tingle, drive-thru -- was kidnapped, drove through the streets, and shot. his clothes were left hung up in this fairgrounds for a year. the clan dared any black person to remove them because they wanted black people to know he had allegedly...
0
0.0
Feb 6, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
mississippi mississippi republicans use the language of invasion and great replacement theory.. the entry migrants of escaping crisis for a better life is not invasion. i now yield -- i reserve. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves. the gentleman from tennessee. mr. green: i yield two minutes to the gentleman from texas, chairman arrington. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. arrington: just a comment about this not being an invasion. no honest or objective american from sea to shining sea could characterize what is happening at our southern border as an invasion and destroying our country and because of the willful neglect and the dereliction of duty and because of the faithlessness to this constitution and first job to provide a common defense. i thank chairman green for restoring the dignity and integrity of the impeachment process. i think it is important that we are careful that we make the fullness of due process an important feature restoring what has happened over the last two impeachments. this is a year-long process. and i appreciate y
mississippi mississippi republicans use the language of invasion and great replacement theory.. the entry migrants of escaping crisis for a better life is not invasion. i now yield -- i reserve. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman reserves. the gentleman from tennessee. mr. green: i yield two minutes to the gentleman from texas, chairman arrington. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman is recognized. mr. arrington: just a comment about this not being an invasion. no honest or objective...
0
0.0
Feb 23, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
emmett till and reverend parker traveled to mississippi just a month or so after brown v. board of education was decided. this is the second round decision of the supreme court. the first had been handed down a year earlier, striking down separate but equal as unconstitutional. in may of 1955, the second round -- brown decision was handed down. this is the implementation order. what that meant too many people in the south was exactly the opposite of what it means. deliberate means to think about, slow down and no rush and when people thought things would change overnight in the so-called way of life in the south, this caste system, this racial hierarchy, this apartheid that existed was going to be destroyed and little black kids were going to sit next to little white kids at the school the next day. it took years to make progress in that regard but they were alarmed. there were couple of murders in the south just a county away from where emmett and reverend parker traveled. that was one part of it. people were up in arms because they were afraid, they were angry and scared
emmett till and reverend parker traveled to mississippi just a month or so after brown v. board of education was decided. this is the second round decision of the supreme court. the first had been handed down a year earlier, striking down separate but equal as unconstitutional. in may of 1955, the second round -- brown decision was handed down. this is the implementation order. what that meant too many people in the south was exactly the opposite of what it means. deliberate means to think...
0
0.0
Feb 7, 2024
02/24
by
KQED
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
>> you have to remember, the mike fight for the civil rights act rolled through mississippi.violent city in at a woolworths was at jackson, mississippi p the famous one where not only was flour and sugar dumped on this integrated group of people trying to desegregate the lunch counter, they were beaten. they were beaten and bloodied and left on the ground and it became an international story. that was one of the things that provoked the kennedy administration to say enough is enough. the violence that went through the university of mississippi when it s desegregated was unlike anything anyone had ever seen. the incidents that took place combined with the alabama stand at the schoolhouse door were sort of the final last straw for the kennedy administration. kennedy had been a reluctant friend of the civil rights movement because he needed southern votes. back then, these southern states were still swing states. he really wanted to do a big tax cut. he finally said, i'm going to do it. the thing that i think people don't know is that kennedy used some of medgar evers' language.
>> you have to remember, the mike fight for the civil rights act rolled through mississippi.violent city in at a woolworths was at jackson, mississippi p the famous one where not only was flour and sugar dumped on this integrated group of people trying to desegregate the lunch counter, they were beaten. they were beaten and bloodied and left on the ground and it became an international story. that was one of the things that provoked the kennedy administration to say enough is enough. the...
0
0.0
Feb 12, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
goes up to the mississippi river.hinking the country is going to expand into the northwest. he didn't like the south. he went on this southerner did not like the south. he went on as president. he did tours of the country. he thought he should show himself. his first one was 1789 to new england, and he goes to rhode island. it's after ratifies constitution of 1790 and he really likes new england. it's orderly at things put together. well, there he had learned to deal with the new england soldiers. they he understood this was already a country of cultural diversity in the revolution. and the way you dealt with virginia soldiers and the way you dealt with new england soldiers was different. and you better figure it out. he goes, he loves that part of the country. the next year, too, he goes on a trip to the south, trudging through north carolina, trying to find a decent in the ramshackle buildings. he doesn't like the south carolina coast that has 90% of the population are black slaves. he does not like that kind of soc
goes up to the mississippi river.hinking the country is going to expand into the northwest. he didn't like the south. he went on this southerner did not like the south. he went on as president. he did tours of the country. he thought he should show himself. his first one was 1789 to new england, and he goes to rhode island. it's after ratifies constitution of 1790 and he really likes new england. it's orderly at things put together. well, there he had learned to deal with the new england...
0
0.0
Feb 5, 2024
02/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
governor tate reeves of mississippi.ou in "focus." >> thanks for having me on. >> harris: tell me what your first impressions were when you got to the border and you saw the containers and the razor wire. >> well, you know, one of the things you don't see particularly well in many of the pictures that came from yesterday's press conference is that literally shelby park is underneath a bridge. on that bridge is a legal port of entry from mexico into the united states of america. so the policies that the biden administration has implemented has made america less safe and literally it is mind-boggling to me this is the decisions that have been made by this administration. >> harris: it's interesting. if people chose to they could legally come in. so when you go down there and i've been to eagle pass, it is miles of people coming in everywhere but that specific entry point. >> that's exactly right. that's a legal port of entry and it is literally people were crossing to and from mexico into texas the entire time we were ther
governor tate reeves of mississippi.ou in "focus." >> thanks for having me on. >> harris: tell me what your first impressions were when you got to the border and you saw the containers and the razor wire. >> well, you know, one of the things you don't see particularly well in many of the pictures that came from yesterday's press conference is that literally shelby park is underneath a bridge. on that bridge is a legal port of entry from mexico into the united states...
0
0.0
Feb 20, 2024
02/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in mississippi, we won two times when they tried personhood. mississippi. mississippi.ke no mistake. don't be misled by his fraudulent written up in the new york times as a legitimate -- what's happened to them? a legitimate proposal of a time limit on terminating a pregnancy. no ban on abortion. but also, let's talk about women just exercising their greater access to contraception, or to in vitro fertilization. this is a very dangerous person. when it comes to your family, and your kitchen table, this is only one example of how dangerous he is. >> it's so important that alabama case that you raised. so many women are mothers because of ivf. and so many are hoping to be mothers. and he said he wants a 16-week ban because he likes around number. so let's be horrified by that to. i have so much more i want to talk to you about, i also want to talk to you about aid to ukraine, and we can get it there. we do have to sneak in a very quick break, only 60 seconds. but we'll be right back with house speaker emerita nancy pelosi and 60 seconds. stay with us. with us. >>> we are
in mississippi, we won two times when they tried personhood. mississippi. mississippi.ke no mistake. don't be misled by his fraudulent written up in the new york times as a legitimate -- what's happened to them? a legitimate proposal of a time limit on terminating a pregnancy. no ban on abortion. but also, let's talk about women just exercising their greater access to contraception, or to in vitro fertilization. this is a very dangerous person. when it comes to your family, and your kitchen...
0
0.0
Feb 6, 2024
02/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
of his home in jackson mississippi.on their front lawn. the following week, the ku klux klan member aossatou -- was arrested for i'm editor -- but it would take 31 years and two hung juries along the way before of this is a big courtroom would convict the self proclaimed white supremacist for the murder of medgar evers. in her new book, madder and morally, medgar evers and the love story that awake in america, joy reid describes medgar evers assassination. here is that passage from the audio book read by joy reid. >> she was clutching at medicare, and trying to pull him inside. she was yelling his name and desperately praying. scattered on the ground in front of, him or the t-shirts and posters he was carrying for the meeting earlier that night. they raid, jim crow must go. medical had been shot in the back with the bullet exploding out of his chest, and crashing through the living room window. the bullet had knocked medicare down, but he had used all his strength to drag himself halfway up the driveway and arrived the
of his home in jackson mississippi.on their front lawn. the following week, the ku klux klan member aossatou -- was arrested for i'm editor -- but it would take 31 years and two hung juries along the way before of this is a big courtroom would convict the self proclaimed white supremacist for the murder of medgar evers. in her new book, madder and morally, medgar evers and the love story that awake in america, joy reid describes medgar evers assassination. here is that passage from the audio...
0
0.0
Feb 27, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
host: john is in vivid, mississippi -- leland, mississippi. caller: i love this country.it honorably, i would die for this country. we are tribal. tribal human beings, we have been ridiculous. watch the dred scott decision was made, every person in this country became deputized and enslaved african americans. billions of acres that have been donated to -- we have an educational system that -- if you learn to read. why do we have to pay for education? is all about keeping black people at the bottom. i don't know if they got together and decided their to do this but it is a concerted effort to keep black people down. you don't want any even playing field. you are afraid of our potential. we cannot say that about his or anybody else. after having slavery 400 years and we have only been free like 60 years, since the civil rights movement. -- their court on whether trump should be on the ballot were not and this issue should never go to the national level. i would like it if somebody would realize that their words in the constitution means something and people need to look at
host: john is in vivid, mississippi -- leland, mississippi. caller: i love this country.it honorably, i would die for this country. we are tribal. tribal human beings, we have been ridiculous. watch the dred scott decision was made, every person in this country became deputized and enslaved african americans. billions of acres that have been donated to -- we have an educational system that -- if you learn to read. why do we have to pay for education? is all about keeping black people at the...
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
c can i ask you, i mean, in as well as defense minister, mississippi onto a said, we're close friends with china. we respect america and we seek friendship with russia, which obviously describes engine uses, policy of kind of known alignment. i'm being against on talking to stick blogs. i mean, obviously the well just going through changes at the moment. everyone talks about multiple r t during the rise ation. tensions are rising between the west and the east, let's say, is it going to been difficult to navigate uh for in a fast if i missed just to be on to the columns, then you need to a mississippian has to that he is a um, he has a really great diploma as a defense and it's very humane said good relations with russia. busy china and with the united states, and basically we'll continue when he, when he had sworn in as the new upcoming precedents. and with the changes in the uh for a uh, in the bobo dynamics. we are sure one thing we're supporting palestine, we're a friend of palestine and we will continue to place this in the global events in international conferences. and that is t
c can i ask you, i mean, in as well as defense minister, mississippi onto a said, we're close friends with china. we respect america and we seek friendship with russia, which obviously describes engine uses, policy of kind of known alignment. i'm being against on talking to stick blogs. i mean, obviously the well just going through changes at the moment. everyone talks about multiple r t during the rise ation. tensions are rising between the west and the east, let's say, is it going to been...
0
0.0
Feb 7, 2024
02/24
by
KPIX
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
one mississippi. two mississippi. -can we go!? -yeah! faster! oh, no sirree.eelman. it's a family name on my mother's side. -what? -irish. who says you can't go for bold without going broke... get the brands you want, the prices you want, whenever you want. tj maxx where you can always afford to be you to the maxx. wanna know how i get this glow?! i get ready with new olay indulgent moisture body wash. it smells amazing and gives my skin over the top moisture! from dull to visibly glowing in 14 days! ♪♪ see the difference with olay. this ad? typical. politicians... "he's bad. i'm good." blah, blah. let's shake things up. with katie porter. porter refuses corporate pac money. and leads the fight to ban congressional stock trading. katie porter. taking on big banks to make housing more affordable. and drug company ceos to stop their price gouging. most politicians just fight each other. while katie porter fights for you. for senate - democrat katie porter. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. [cheers and applause] ♪ ♪ >> stephen: welcome back, everybody.
one mississippi. two mississippi. -can we go!? -yeah! faster! oh, no sirree.eelman. it's a family name on my mother's side. -what? -irish. who says you can't go for bold without going broke... get the brands you want, the prices you want, whenever you want. tj maxx where you can always afford to be you to the maxx. wanna know how i get this glow?! i get ready with new olay indulgent moisture body wash. it smells amazing and gives my skin over the top moisture! from dull to visibly glowing in 14...
0
0.0
Feb 21, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the mississippi. they had no regular sources of information at all. assessing generals was all pervasive. occasionally there was some humility. the portland, oregon. in commenting on the removal of general george mcclellan, noted that the events were happening 3000 miles away and therefore it was not possible to form anything like reliable conclusions at the other end of scale was the union in dakota. in which accused general pope of grossest and most flagrant and misconduct. they were right, by the way. there were high hopes for for mcclellan commanded the invasion of virginia in 1862. mcclellan's reputation wobbled, but his latest october 30, the oregonian, and reported that there was no need to believe the rumors that mcclellan had been superseded. he was fired six days later. the oregonian soon reported that lincoln was unhappy with mcclellan for his inaction after. the same good, bad pattern can be seen with his success. ambrosi, burnside, of course, is also on the poster whose initial assaults at fredericksburg were described as successful blows
the mississippi. they had no regular sources of information at all. assessing generals was all pervasive. occasionally there was some humility. the portland, oregon. in commenting on the removal of general george mcclellan, noted that the events were happening 3000 miles away and therefore it was not possible to form anything like reliable conclusions at the other end of scale was the union in dakota. in which accused general pope of grossest and most flagrant and misconduct. they were right,...
0
0.0
Feb 6, 2024
02/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
luther king junior's bravest ally in jackson mississippi in 1963 was 37-year-old and lacey p officialan who knew that his life was not any safer in jackson mississippi that it was the day he faced and enemy fire as he landed on omaha beach in normandy. on the day. in the video, of one of the protests, medgar evers light against segregation in 1963 that we are about to show you, you will hear him use the word that white people in mississippi used to refer to a black people. they even used to the and word as you're about to hear when speaking directly to black people. >> don't shop for anything on campus street. let's let the merchants down on capitol street feel the economic pinch. let me say this to you. i had one merchant to call me and he said i want you to know that i talked to myself national office today, and they want me to tell you that we don't need -- business. the stories that, the council that has dedicated to keeping you and i second-class adenosines. let us not played the stores. what urge our friends, our relatives, our neighbors not to traded the stores. finally ladies
luther king junior's bravest ally in jackson mississippi in 1963 was 37-year-old and lacey p officialan who knew that his life was not any safer in jackson mississippi that it was the day he faced and enemy fire as he landed on omaha beach in normandy. on the day. in the video, of one of the protests, medgar evers light against segregation in 1963 that we are about to show you, you will hear him use the word that white people in mississippi used to refer to a black people. they even used to the...
0
0.0
Feb 21, 2024
02/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
if you look at the world in 2023, the amazon river, very low, mississippi river, very low, mississippiit is not only panama, it's the world that has seen a lot of different climate situations since 2023.— different climate situations since 2023. ~ ., ., , since 2023. while other routes suffer distraction _ since 2023. while other routes suffer distraction from - suffer distraction from disruption from politics and piracy, the problems of the panama canal are piracy, the problems of the panama canalare a piracy, the problems of the panama canal are a reminder that climate change may yet be the biggest crisis for global trade. michelle fleury, bbc news, panama canal. imagine being able to control a computer mouse with just your thoughts. that is what the first human patient of brain chip start newer lincoln do, according to its founder elon musk. mr musk says the patient also seems to have made a full recovery with no ill effects we are aware of. newer link planted a chip in a human for the first timejust last planted a chip in a human for the first time just last month. that is it for t
if you look at the world in 2023, the amazon river, very low, mississippi river, very low, mississippiit is not only panama, it's the world that has seen a lot of different climate situations since 2023.— different climate situations since 2023. ~ ., ., , since 2023. while other routes suffer distraction _ since 2023. while other routes suffer distraction from - suffer distraction from disruption from politics and piracy, the problems of the panama canal are piracy, the problems of the panama...
0
0.0
Feb 11, 2024
02/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
[music playing] the baltimore ravens select michael oher, offensive tackle, mississippi. when the nfl draft came around in 2009, michael oher brought the tuohys to his introductory press conference and introduced them as kind of his parents, which he thought they were. they meant a lot to me. i don't think i'd be here without them. they showed me a lot of things. they taught me a lot. so i owe them everything. michael, do you want to introduce them? sure. you got my dad, sean tuohy, on the first row seat. mom, leigh anne tuohy, brother sean, and collins, older sis. there's always 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 truths in every story. if i looked at this story, i would say, it's about a young man who had his voice taken from him early on. do you have any place to stay tonight? don't you dare lie to me. the blind side told this story in a very boiled down way of michael oher, a young black kid coming from the projects of memphis, from a dysfunctional family, who is embraced and eventually adopted by this white family that's wealthy. they were kind of taking them like they were accepting him
[music playing] the baltimore ravens select michael oher, offensive tackle, mississippi. when the nfl draft came around in 2009, michael oher brought the tuohys to his introductory press conference and introduced them as kind of his parents, which he thought they were. they meant a lot to me. i don't think i'd be here without them. they showed me a lot of things. they taught me a lot. so i owe them everything. michael, do you want to introduce them? sure. you got my dad, sean tuohy, on the...
0
0.0
Feb 8, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
that the majority leader walks away from a legitimate question from our colleague, the senator from mississippi, that asks whether there will be an opportunity for debate and votes on amendments, he won't even answer the question. this is the same majority leader that put this bill on the floor that we'll be voting on at 1:00 and said, okay, we released the text on sunday night and in 72 hours senators are going to have to vote on it. these are detailed, complex negotiations that have been taking place for months now, and the majority leader won't even give the senate and senators time to digest it and understand it? i think that tells you all you need to know about his motives. this is all about partisan political attacks and posturing leading up to the november 2024 election. president biden is guilty of some of the same posturing. he said -- this is rich. after secretary mayorkas, the secretary of homeland security, has said time and time again under oath, the border is secure, well, we knew that was a lie because our eyes did not deceive us. we could see what was happening at the border. we
that the majority leader walks away from a legitimate question from our colleague, the senator from mississippi, that asks whether there will be an opportunity for debate and votes on amendments, he won't even answer the question. this is the same majority leader that put this bill on the floor that we'll be voting on at 1:00 and said, okay, we released the text on sunday night and in 72 hours senators are going to have to vote on it. these are detailed, complex negotiations that have been...
0
0.0
Feb 8, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
that's the question my friend from mississippi was trying to ask the majority leader, but he decided to leave the floor without responding to that. giving me some doubt as to the sincerity of his commitment to have an open amendment process and actually restore the senate to its previously held reputation as the world greatest deliberative body here nobody can call us that now with a straight face. and i understand the majority leader is trying the best he can to help the republican party. he gives advice freely as to what republicans should do, but the fact of the matter is we have no confidence, zero conference, that the biden administration will enforce the law when it comes to the border. that's been the case the last three years, resulting in historically high numbers, 300,000 people a month showing up at the border only to be ushered into the interior by biden open border policies that either people claim asylum and are released into the interior, perhaps never to be heard from again, or they are released on parole. catch and release is the policy of the biden administration an
that's the question my friend from mississippi was trying to ask the majority leader, but he decided to leave the floor without responding to that. giving me some doubt as to the sincerity of his commitment to have an open amendment process and actually restore the senate to its previously held reputation as the world greatest deliberative body here nobody can call us that now with a straight face. and i understand the majority leader is trying the best he can to help the republican party. he...
0
0.0
Feb 18, 2024
02/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the jackson mississippi severe council that is majority african american. kirksey drew those districts. so far henry kirksey's legacy, we have to remember. and as you know, the good people who are often not heard, often misunderstood while they're here on earth, but revered after they leave. henry kirksey was misunderstood, but he is revered by those of us who understood what he was all about. so, his legacy lives on, and you know, he was also a professor at my alma mater, to blue college. so we hired him to teach young black kids all about their history. >> i've been to that college with you. thank you very much for that. i'm sure my producer and his family appreciate it. thank you for being with us tonight, congressman benny thompson. let's turn to our political panel. brendan buck, former -- vice presidential nominee paul ryan, and michael hardaway, former staffer to house minority leader hakeem jeffries and senator dick durbin. brandon, we'll start with former president trump, who is in philadelphia yesterday getting booed while he limited and 400 dolla
the jackson mississippi severe council that is majority african american. kirksey drew those districts. so far henry kirksey's legacy, we have to remember. and as you know, the good people who are often not heard, often misunderstood while they're here on earth, but revered after they leave. henry kirksey was misunderstood, but he is revered by those of us who understood what he was all about. so, his legacy lives on, and you know, he was also a professor at my alma mater, to blue college. so...
0
0.0
Feb 21, 2024
02/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
mississippi river, very low. mississippi river had to stop transits, very low level.has seen a lot of different climate situations this 2023.— situations this 2023. while other routes _ situations this 2023. while other routes are _ situations this 2023. while other routes are for - situations this 2023. while - other routes are for disruption from politics and piracy, the problems that of the panama are a reminder climate change may yet be the biggest crisis for global trade. yet be the biggest crisis for globaltrade. imagine yet be the biggest crisis for global trade. imagine being able to control a computer mouse with just your thoughts? that that is what the first human patient of brain chip start—up neurolink can do according to elon muskt founder. he says they've made a full recovery "with no ill effects that we are aware of" — his quote. us stocks fell as invidia held a broader tech decline ahead of the earnings report. everything is pointing down, the nasdaq most of all. the company is set to announce the later results after the bell today. that's it, bye for
mississippi river, very low. mississippi river had to stop transits, very low level.has seen a lot of different climate situations this 2023.— situations this 2023. while other routes _ situations this 2023. while other routes are _ situations this 2023. while other routes are for - situations this 2023. while - other routes are for disruption from politics and piracy, the problems that of the panama are a reminder climate change may yet be the biggest crisis for global trade. yet be the...
0
0.0
Feb 23, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
host: james from mississippi. caller: how are you all doing? host: good morning. caller: i want to let this man know, hello? host: we are listening. caller: you can say what you want to say about africans, about black folks rounding up american -- african people. you can make that stipulation. over here it is different. slavery started when they went over there, and whatever they did to get those tribes to do what they did, they do not have a right to do it, and they brought them over here and they became slaves. not only slaves, but jim crow. segregation. they could sing, they could dance, but they cannot buy homes and houses because of slavery. you can sit up here and play these games just like they're playing the game with the debt. african-american debt is $16,000. you need to add a $16 trillion on the debt. until this country pays that debt, you will never get out of this debt. you know it for yourself. you have the audacity to try to blame what these people did over here. you're tried to put it back over there. i can say that about vladimir putin. this is am
host: james from mississippi. caller: how are you all doing? host: good morning. caller: i want to let this man know, hello? host: we are listening. caller: you can say what you want to say about africans, about black folks rounding up american -- african people. you can make that stipulation. over here it is different. slavery started when they went over there, and whatever they did to get those tribes to do what they did, they do not have a right to do it, and they brought them over here and...
0
0.0
Feb 29, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
mississippi republican senators objected to the request to saying the bill went too far beyond and ensuring legal access. other democratic senators also weighed in on the topic. >> i've been called a lot of names in my life. tammy, lieutenant colonel, senators and a couple of others i shouldn't mention. mommy though is without a doubt my favorite name. it's the one my 5-year-old uses when she runs into the house and pulls on my sleeve to show me what she learned during her lesson. it's the one my 9-year-old says when she announces her plan when she was little she wanted to grow up to be a garbage collector and now she's leaning towards an armytl cyber warrior. they wouldn't have been bored if i didn't have the rights to access thathe we had been depending on for nearly a half a century because after a decade of struggling with infertility after my service in iraq i was only able to get pregnant through the miracle of ivf. ivf is the reason i get to experience the chaos and the beauty, the stress and of the the joythat is motherhood. it's the reason that we are not just tammy and brian but w
mississippi republican senators objected to the request to saying the bill went too far beyond and ensuring legal access. other democratic senators also weighed in on the topic. >> i've been called a lot of names in my life. tammy, lieutenant colonel, senators and a couple of others i shouldn't mention. mommy though is without a doubt my favorite name. it's the one my 5-year-old uses when she runs into the house and pulls on my sleeve to show me what she learned during her lesson. it's...
0
0.0
Feb 29, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
it is going to be megan rivers in mississippi fighting against -- medgar evers in mississippi. officers in world war i pushing back against the racial violence during the red summer. when you talk about red summer, african-americans were killed, but in chicago, that wasn't the case. they had black veterans setting up snipers picking people off. thinking about the importance of military training, this is one of the reasons why you have that consisted -- the youth of military training to defend their communities, their families, is crucial because, guess what they could do during slavery? now, they can have guns. they had them. they do fight back. and they did. for example, the tulsa massacre. how many of you watched "the watchmen?" love that show. it begins with the tulsa massacre. when that show aired, people had no idea. this happened? they were dropping dynamite from airplanes? they are bombing people? this is america. gosh, no. yes. but, he is a -- the father of the first superhero in the watchmen universe was a world war i veteran. he is wearing his uniform and he is hiding
it is going to be megan rivers in mississippi fighting against -- medgar evers in mississippi. officers in world war i pushing back against the racial violence during the red summer. when you talk about red summer, african-americans were killed, but in chicago, that wasn't the case. they had black veterans setting up snipers picking people off. thinking about the importance of military training, this is one of the reasons why you have that consisted -- the youth of military training to defend...
0
0.0
Feb 23, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
well, i was an english major at the university of mississippi, and i decided after kind of doing both the pre-med track and the english major that i was going to go to medical and i was going to be a family medicine doctor, and i was going to write and get paid by patients and tomatoes and chickens and live in south mississippi. that's really what i thought. i was going to do. and then i remember you know, every part of medical school is is the anatomy lab. i went to university of mississippi medical center, which is a great medical i'm very proud of my time there because we we really learned the anatomy. we really learned the physiology and when it was time to take care of patients, we were the we were the ones taking care of patients. so by the time i got to duke as a resident, i had done more procedures and been involved with the direct patient care than many other people. so i just say all that to say that that anatomy lab i just remember dissecting out the brachial plexus, which is this beautiful, beautiful white macramÉ like series of nerves in the neck that out of the spinal co
well, i was an english major at the university of mississippi, and i decided after kind of doing both the pre-med track and the english major that i was going to go to medical and i was going to be a family medicine doctor, and i was going to write and get paid by patients and tomatoes and chickens and live in south mississippi. that's really what i thought. i was going to do. and then i remember you know, every part of medical school is is the anatomy lab. i went to university of mississippi...
0
0.0
Feb 20, 2024
02/24
by
KPIX
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
but he was doing that job in the most difficult state to do it in the united states, mississippi waseople. it was literally the most dangerous place to be black in america. >> stephen: mississippi. >> joy-ann: absolutely, exactly. he was a world war ii veteran. he'd gone at 18 years of age. he fought on normandy beach. he'd been in the red ball express, which was this segregated unit that was the transportation corps. he'd been to europe. he had seen some of the world and he came back saying i'm not going to fight fascism in europe and then come home to fascism in mississippi so he decided, the first thing he did was he was wearing his uniform. he got back to decatur, georgia, and he was told to go to the back of bus and he refused. and he was beaten and he said he took the beating of his life and he was a different man. and myrlie evers was a 17-year-old from vicksburg, mississippi, who met medgar the first day she was at alcorn college, and her grandmother and her aunt who was also named myrlie said there's three kinds of men you need to stay way from in college. upperclassman, foo
but he was doing that job in the most difficult state to do it in the united states, mississippi waseople. it was literally the most dangerous place to be black in america. >> stephen: mississippi. >> joy-ann: absolutely, exactly. he was a world war ii veteran. he'd gone at 18 years of age. he fought on normandy beach. he'd been in the red ball express, which was this segregated unit that was the transportation corps. he'd been to europe. he had seen some of the world and he came...