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tv   [untitled]    March 10, 2025 6:30am-7:01am AST

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from piece cigarette tough to cigarette to mock the memories of a siege by sub forces of the both in the town of garage to defend it, but for a hastily formed may of civilians. ready who have the prospect of renewed conflict as political intentions. rise is not something they sold soldiers willing to come to place me so new. oh, i'm not the pessimist. i don't think there will be fighting. it's too cool, but we've had enough, i think. and personally, i come from people who remember the war and the reason will prevail and find the better memories of drone and cray owned by grand children growing up in peace time . thanks to the 1995 day peace agreement that continues to hold the we accept the data. although it was clear that this was in a way, a reward for the aggressor, the thing we wanted to preserve both in heads the galena, within his borders and to end the fighting, is nicholas then off a pencil line on
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a war time map shows what the dates and the codes achieved the separate entities for both incense on one side, both in the acts and crow that's on the of the united understood institutions and with international oversight. it was a line intended to knit war time enemies together under a new state. instead, politicians have sought to exploit it as a bold, entrenching division to both me and said, needed miller. dick faces a prison to him for undermining the constitution. and some see it, he's intent on secession, reviving the idea of a great to serbia that so the seats for war in the 1st place. but most of both being said, we spoke to disagree with it. the few would say so on the camera, the william assumption a lot about the maybe is too much for me to speak on behalf of my entire people. but i will say this, we want to be so we want to functional and stable both and have sort of, you know,
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as it is now. and no one wants to tear at the part of the complex system of government since the war remains. in other words, the own, the blueprint for peace. jo, no l g 0 in easton, both now in the usa that alabama hundreds of people to mount the 60th anniversary of a civil rights riley that led to enhanced the voting rights for black americans actress involved in the original mazda of joining the commemoration of the city of selma and 1965, some 600 items and bought toner, 80 kilometer march to end racial discrimination, many would beat and then guess blank state troopers. that's it from a the clock. the one who's coming up right off the when delusion from the truth, the fact hanging the balance, he's going after the media in
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a way that's unprecedented. the narrative is being re, re these, choosing to the amplify when voices of silence agendas prevailed. attacks on the press, our next part of a broader effort to suppress the story. systemic emissions. main control. what has this discussion looked like in a right wing? and media circles again is for 50, is being labeled with the situation. the listening post coding the media analysis era, the supreme court as long held the political blank cards or form of expression protected by the 1st amendment.
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it's never fun to lose a case, i think, but again, as often get emotionally invested in their case. i've certainly very emotionally invested in these cases. i think ellen's frustrated. i think it's a lot of pressure americans on times. they are really needing a lot of money on the table to participate in this lawsuit. i think that so many legislators in the us are afraid to take on the pro israel lobby from police. the judge will see said this is a violation of the 1st amendment, and he will repeal this law in the 1960 s put citizens of fort gibson, mississippi, organized a boycott of white businesses to protest ongoing segregation.
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the you have done this and that was the only way we're not in positions of power and we're not in positions. leadership. the only thing we have was the dollars, the board hot emotions. so all of the board participants, as well as the in double a c p for all the business losses base the state as a result of the board and the mississippi supreme court held the support was a legal under state law. and so the case was all the way up to united states supreme court hope and pray to god the supreme court ruled that the board call was late because i think that's one of the only means with black people have. and i wanted to let people know in the world them know that we will no longer go back to where
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we was in the past. and the justices hold unanimously that the 1st amendment protects the right to boycott. and what they say is that boycotting is a practice deeply embedded in the american political process is a way in which individual citizens can band together to make their voices collectively heard when individually their voices would be lost or silence. html. a safety says that while it is the immediate beneficiary of the fort gibson ruling, the ruling goes beyond that to allow any organization anywhere to use boy cards and select the buying campaigns to support its political grievance. the are appealing in the district right? decision in arkansas, i think that's what appeals parts are for us to correct decisions when district works. got it wrong. the
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. ringback ringback ringback the, the decision isn't a surprise i believe that this bill is going to continue to, to win in the courts. very well may be that gods chosen and bless us because we protect israel. and so i'm going to continue doing a state level all that i can to, to support that this is my great great grandfather and he was the confederate doesn't my mom is my dad. she was always very conservative. i was raised conservative
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and i started moving to the left over the years as a recovery and conservative. i want to be left alone. you know, you do your job, you get your business own merit, and you get paid for it and you don't pass some political litmus test. this is america, the legislative tours. they want to be in your bedroom. they want to be in your business. and they call themselves conservative or no, i don't think they are any better than the i toes. frankly. i just want to be involved in your, in your life and tell you what to do. get you to haven't i don't, i don't get it. the
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a lot of this is motivated by this evangelical biblical literalism. it's scary. the 30th chapter is each you got promise to protect israel against total annihilation by our enemies from the north. the bible is very clear, there is going to be certain things that happen in israel before christ returns. listen to this very closely. bodily shares when jerusalem is no longer trodden down by the gentiles, then shall the end times be looked $21.00. there will be famines in disease and war and the jewish people are going to go back to their homeland at that point,
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jesus christ will come back to the year when the king. com. we will all go to heaven while the earth is burned with fire. anybody jewish or not yours? that doesn't accept christ in my opinion, one of going to hell at some point i believe that god is going to open the jewish people's eyes to really who jesus christ was. you have 2 options to know and to serve jesus christ or to know and to serve the end of christ . but you're going to serve one of those to cool. have you chosen even though the jews are going to burn in order to get in because they're not going become christians? these railey is still the what the support. it just says weird marriage of cynicism, inconvenience between the evangelical right. and the, the lobbying helped us for the state of israel. christians everywhere, must be brought to understand that you guys are not merely supporters of is around
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. you guys are stakeholders by making your voices heard. you guys are going to insure the overwhelming passage of this law for putting together an army. absolutely. does my own or to welcome my dear friend, the 9th and current prime minister of the state of israel. pastor john, thanks to your leadership. now there are millions and millions of developed christian will stand with that as well. so i want to thank you on behalf of all the people of israel, and i want to thank the thousands of you who come to washington from across america to stand with israel, the
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today, we're filing our appeal to the 8th circuit. this is a final brief that gets filed before oral argument was done on the 10 pages left. right. thanks bye. the do it the right we're going to submit the thank you likewise. so excited to win. if the don't think that would be
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the, the power of the seat is cleaning here is the power to outlaw reading criminalized boy cards based on nothing more than ideological hostility. so if the state can outlaw bts boy cost, because it doesn't look at my suspicion about israel, then it can have the same power doubt law or touched the inner rate because it doesn't like the muster space in america's across the political spectrum. there's a lot at stake here. it is not just about what is good for israel or good for justice in palestine. the issues here are deeper and run broader. if we're going to go ahead and punish people for not supporting israel, that arkansas must punish people for not supporting planned parenthood in massachusetts and in california. and in new york. you know,
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where do you want this to stop? you may not care about palestine, but you shouldn't care if it's being used as a hook to legislate in your states and at the federal level against free speech. how many words would i have to change in this legislation? to use it to condition contract and thereby flushed free speech? of anyone to say sports black was or is involved in protesting for environmental reasons. and it's like 10 or, or is the template why people are not more worried about it. is just the univision, one of these places, which is the spring force if it, as will be prepared to defend the good morning. the court. my name is brian house. i represent the arkansas times the
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amount of subsets commission. i'm going to see that our segregation laws are up here. when we think about what influence we have over our government in america, there are only a couple of ways that we can do that. one is by voting. another way is with a drawing my time and my labor and my money until things change the fee on that i was being treated as a human being. i refused to get up to speed. i said no. and if we think about 1955 in the montgomery boycott of the buses, that is a sheet example. black people decided we're going to walk to work. why should we be paying money to be discriminated and to be marginalized? that way it doesn't make sense. the
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mandate for united states supreme court concerning 1st segregation came from them from the protest against the process is official and the citizens of montgomery urge to return to the 1st page pro no, no segregated the . so back when i was in college, one of the big issues that i was involved in was boy cutting the investment from
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apartheid south africa, the 10. if we look back at that period of time, some of the most active places where that was happening were on college campuses including my own. and the idea there was that it was up to the students to put pressure on the administration of the school to not have investments in companies that were essentially furthering and enabling the horrible racist apartheid regime in south africa. the looking back on that period from a number of years, most people would say it was not only the right thing to do. it was one of the high points of american engagement in the question of justice, where i'm not to the doctor across the masters of the paper off the,
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or not the states of america, or support our drugs when we, when i know the and so what becomes really deeply important is for people to be able to say, i am going to be active in the political discussion by withdrawing my time and my labor and my money until things change. and to have a proliferation of bills that are cruel, rising or penalizing that is really, really troubling and problematic is aren't closing on. i just wanna say that it's not for nothing that we say that people vote with their pocketbooks. us are an expression of popular sovereignty. their environments of wheat, of people in the district court's decision here effectively gives the government an unchecked power to silence those voices based on nothing more than viewpoint discrimination. thank you. thank you to both parties for your free thing,
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an argument, and we'll take the matter and or vice versa for crazy yesterday just driving the kids to the tournaments or taekwondo turner and all the time the phone was just kept, you know, by reading and making noise and so i like idea what's going on. so the night when i pulled over, and that's why i saw it, the
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federal judge has blocked a texas law. that stops government agencies from doing business with contractors who boy talk. israel is a victory for a former flu or vill i as the speech pathologist, the way it's hard to power supply my emotions. but i was in tears. i was that, you know, very close. here's the latest, very content at the news. and i quite relieved that i can now go back to work and be able to service these children that otherwise would have have someone available for them being able to go back and make a disperse. and that's what i really love of my job. the
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wood had your company and your job and came in to the court room and i just want to say you are all amazing and we're all strong as one of us. but in such a it's such that amazing, amazing, amazing. so beautiful the you went through a process, a really challenging process there solely community members here who saw what you did and who say for so great. and that should turn into like, i can do it to the i was thinking about, you actually know that there might be someone who, you know, makes the story. remember that in did this. i mean, it's such a cool feeling. they're very proud of the fact her mom was able to voice
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her opinions and i'm stand up for principles and values. i mean, i know, you know, so i was in the, on the controller. i kind of look for all and show me on the this is alice brown. i'm doing fine. brian, how are you? i just wanted to call to congratulate you on uh, thrilling this morning. thanks for your understanding. yeah, yes. the great privilege of this job is going to represent people who really stick by their principles even when it gets to the circuit court of appeals in st. louis, today, throughout the arkansas as misguided more time the bill we
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want the file was really pleased. it just confirms that we still have a 1st amendment to stop in a row. it was incumbent upon us as journalist to protect the re. okay. cooperate with me. yeah, just found. uh yeah. after all the briefing was done, the oral arguments were made. we all went home carried on our lives and. and finally, we had a really we seem to have prevailed and everything that we want we want
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so i had not been paid for about a year. once that ruling came out a couple of days later, i got a check in the mail, which is great. its so utterly clear that what that is doing is right. so it's really validating to get support from the court. i think the lawsuit, it's giving us a lot more to connect about. we haven't always been super, super close, but politics and just as far as this venue where we get to collaborate and that has really strengthened our relationship and our connection the next year. so we got a great ruling from the district court in arizona. the district judge there recognizes that the fundamental purpose of these laws is to suppress expression
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that the government doesn't like. and that's exactly what makes the spells unconstitutional. and i think sooner or later, we will ultimately realize the truth as during everybody in the face, which is that these anti bully cod certification forms belonging to destiny history . the point i want to close the saying is, the protection of person enterprise will not open that lead, be decided by federal courts. even the federal supreme court will not ultimately decide whether these rights are protected rights are trained in the parts of the people. and it's only by exercising and advocating for these right say in a day out, they will be maintained. and if people do that, the know courts know, congress, a new president can ever take them away. the
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the, [000:00:00;00]
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the, a sinus clement as quasi is missing in the aging to set out as priorities for the yes. how are the worlds 2nd largest economy? we have to respond traits, how supposed 5 of us and what's direction will it take to manage the worlds fastest aging population,
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special coverage of trying to spend 2 sessions on this. one out of the relationship with nature is one of the importance of fossil fuel extraction, intensive agriculture, over consumption. it becomes quite clear. we need a reset, ohio, the planet excuse how reassessing human kind place within the well is key to tackling climate change. this is a ton difference, will be piece of will leave me. we are house with nature, no support from it on out you 0 infectious disease experts say the next them it is coming to. i mean we're, we're definitely not prepared. and i think that's very clear, an organism we know about, or a deadly new book called disease x. either way, there's cause for concern the flats in the curve investigate. on l g 01 day i
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might be covering politics major. i'm actually on my 0 by post all things from serbia. it's a 100 points. most important to me is talking to people understanding what they are going through so that i can convey the headlines from the most human way possible. we believe everyone has a story worth hearing. the israel dots off electricity supplies to the gallons a strip. how about us? close it? unacceptable. blackmail, hit us the spot. totes and come to the at, on the clock. this is out 0. live from the also coming out who's reading the

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