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Mar 19, 2017
03/17
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group and one of those black groups are black women.a specific set of racist ideas have been created that denigrated black women. these ideas are at the intersection of race and gender. i classified and people classify this as gender racism. i certainly see and chronicle the ways in which black women have not only faced obstacles as a result of their race and gender and sexuality and culture. i try to show the ways in which all of these ideas have created notions that have denigrated black women. >> type in your name and you can watch it online at your leisure. next call comes from jamiel in beacon new york. you are on the air jamal. >> caller: good afternoon, sir. i want to thank you so much, young man. i am encouraged by your vision and the piece of history you have shaken. i want to ask you something. jay rogers, dr. ben josner and others who delved into this issue a long time ago. the other gentlemen talked about indian. i am blessed to have a grandmother who is a sioux indian and having a history that goes back to the civil war and
group and one of those black groups are black women.a specific set of racist ideas have been created that denigrated black women. these ideas are at the intersection of race and gender. i classified and people classify this as gender racism. i certainly see and chronicle the ways in which black women have not only faced obstacles as a result of their race and gender and sexuality and culture. i try to show the ways in which all of these ideas have created notions that have denigrated black...
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Mar 11, 2017
03/17
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they were involved in black theology movement in the late '60s and early '70s among black christians to were interested to say that jesus is black and god is black so take christianity from the church to the streets into a dense black america so i was raised in that type of activist setting. >> when did you become ibran kendi? >> i married a beautiful and intelligent woman and be decided to change our names together and we both chose kendi when we wed in 2013. is from a kenyan language and it signifies mud one. so it was special for us of course, . >> host: how was winning the national book award changed your life at the university of florida or wherever else complex. >> so to meet the biggest and best change is that they'd take it seriously and decided to pick it up and were willing to uncritically engage the history of racism and reflect how we can create a more anti-racist future. so i had the opportunity to field forms of communication through social media would. >> hello prof prof i read a book that was a novel it was about black slavery i was wondering when i read it and how co
they were involved in black theology movement in the late '60s and early '70s among black christians to were interested to say that jesus is black and god is black so take christianity from the church to the streets into a dense black america so i was raised in that type of activist setting. >> when did you become ibran kendi? >> i married a beautiful and intelligent woman and be decided to change our names together and we both chose kendi when we wed in 2013. is from a kenyan...
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Mar 12, 2017
03/17
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KCSM
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not your black america. - right, well it's all my black america but black america is multi-faceted. - yeah and no more. - and that's the point. - monolithic than white america, right, right. - there are more african americans than all the people in canada. - is that right? - [dr. gates] there are 42 million african americans and somebody can, right now, you can google. (audience laughs) i think there are 36 million canadians. - yeah. - yet we use metaphors like the community for afro-america. - right. - it's country. - right. donald trump says the blacks. - the blacks, yeah. - which sound like 10 people right? - yeah, that's right. but martin delaney, i believe in 1852, the father of black nationalism said we are a nation within a nation. that was 1852. and it's true. and so we can never expect 42 million people to be in the same economic class but that's what our redirect has suggested. somehow, we were gonna dismantle de jure segregation and all of us would plunge head-long into the middle class. it's an oxymoron. it never was going to be that way. the best outcome that we could a
not your black america. - right, well it's all my black america but black america is multi-faceted. - yeah and no more. - and that's the point. - monolithic than white america, right, right. - there are more african americans than all the people in canada. - is that right? - [dr. gates] there are 42 million african americans and somebody can, right now, you can google. (audience laughs) i think there are 36 million canadians. - yeah. - yet we use metaphors like the community for afro-america. -...
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Mar 27, 2017
03/17
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BBCNEWS
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i identify as black.ed by both black and white communities, she found herself fired from herjob, unable to find work, raising her children as a single parent on the bread line. she maintains she did nothing wrong. she felt black and to have said differently would have been to lie to herself. what to make of her story, then? a confused woman, product of a terrible infancy, perhaps, literally desperate to escape her own skin? or the start of a bigger conversation about whether people really can self—define their own race? i caught up with her in her home in spokane, washington state. in terms of your own story, you write, "as soon as i was able to make my exodus from the white world in which i was raised, i made a headlong dash towards the black one", so it was a choice for you to leave that white world and head to the black world? yeah, i definitely did not feel at home in the family and in the white world. it felt foreign to me, and it felt uncomfortable and awkward to be there. and it also felt oppressiv
i identify as black.ed by both black and white communities, she found herself fired from herjob, unable to find work, raising her children as a single parent on the bread line. she maintains she did nothing wrong. she felt black and to have said differently would have been to lie to herself. what to make of her story, then? a confused woman, product of a terrible infancy, perhaps, literally desperate to escape her own skin? or the start of a bigger conversation about whether people really can...
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Mar 18, 2017
03/17
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there was a huge thriving black middle class. they are taken political power from the old democrats. in those days, democrats and republicans were sort of reversed. in 1898, the state democratic party decided it was going to " take back" their state and or cities from what they thought of as negro domination. this was their kind of way of putting it. they wanted to take back all the elected offices that were going to be coming up in 1898, which included a lot of the state -- but it didor not include city council, then call the board of aldermen, or the mayor. they basically stole the h intimidation. literally, people stealing ballot boxes and recounting them as so forth. and leading up to that, they had a war of words. it took an interesting turn. there were all kinds of anti-black speeches all over the state, the famous order of which was an excavator at kernel. there was another piece of writing that figured prominently in a newspaper. alexander manley published a firstper he billed as the afro american daily newspaper in the c
there was a huge thriving black middle class. they are taken political power from the old democrats. in those days, democrats and republicans were sort of reversed. in 1898, the state democratic party decided it was going to " take back" their state and or cities from what they thought of as negro domination. this was their kind of way of putting it. they wanted to take back all the elected offices that were going to be coming up in 1898, which included a lot of the state -- but it...
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Mar 19, 2017
03/17
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and the black community, leaders of the black community met and decided to give them what they want, they threw manley out, there were going to shut down the paper and do the other things that the crime never reached waddell and his cohorts because the man who was supposed to deliver it, mailed it instead. he was too afraid to going to that part of the community so on november 10 about 8:00 or so, a crowd of up to 1000 armed white men gathered in wilmington in the armory on market street. they marched up following waddell, turned on seventh street and then sort of rampaged on down to the daily record which was a church hall called freelove hall. when they got there, they surrounded it, bashing the door, shot one man who has remained a unidentified who ran the back wounded and then neighbor down the newspaper. so in so doing, they not only stop manley, he wasn't at the newspaper that point, he fled the city but they not only shut down the newspaper but bird the entire archive of the black community, all those records. it was very hard to find even a single copy of the daily record,the
and the black community, leaders of the black community met and decided to give them what they want, they threw manley out, there were going to shut down the paper and do the other things that the crime never reached waddell and his cohorts because the man who was supposed to deliver it, mailed it instead. he was too afraid to going to that part of the community so on november 10 about 8:00 or so, a crowd of up to 1000 armed white men gathered in wilmington in the armory on market street. they...
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Mar 11, 2017
03/17
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it is just the black body. since wea resentment, started to work backwards, thinking about people like colin kaepernick. even people like marchand lynch who don't comply, who don't conform, who are not enthusiastic about their oppression. is a tendency, a structure built to say they are supposed to just be bodies. they are not supposed to have minds and think and not specific connections with anyone beyond themselves. there is a piece that is a holdover from chattel slavery of alienation. this idea that black people should not be connected with each other. 1936, if weabout think about what jesse owens was supposed to do, what black athletes were supposed to do, we have to understand what's happening in 1936. the harlem renaissance is dying down. but there are real questions about black people and our role as laborers, as workers with civil rights -- what did civil rights for black in this country. there is the assumption of black people should be prioritizing the liberation of other people ahead of our own libe
it is just the black body. since wea resentment, started to work backwards, thinking about people like colin kaepernick. even people like marchand lynch who don't comply, who don't conform, who are not enthusiastic about their oppression. is a tendency, a structure built to say they are supposed to just be bodies. they are not supposed to have minds and think and not specific connections with anyone beyond themselves. there is a piece that is a holdover from chattel slavery of alienation. this...
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Mar 5, 2017
03/17
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had allowed a black men to vote. in march 1870, the american anti-slavery society disbanded, its work, they thought, now complete. congressional reconstruction policy was now essentially complete. henceforth, reconstruction lay in the south. among the former slaves, the passage of the construction act of 1877 that brought black -- of 1867 that brought black suffrage to the south cause political organization. determined to exercise their new rights as citizens, thousands join the union league, an organization closely linked to the republican party and a vast majority of african-americans registered to vote. in 1870, all of the confederate states met the requirements of congress and had been readmitted to the union and were nearly all under control of the republican party. the new constitution drafted in 1868 and 1869 by the first public bodies in american history with substantial black representation of about 1000 delegates in the south, over one quarter were black. they made the structure of seven government more dem
had allowed a black men to vote. in march 1870, the american anti-slavery society disbanded, its work, they thought, now complete. congressional reconstruction policy was now essentially complete. henceforth, reconstruction lay in the south. among the former slaves, the passage of the construction act of 1877 that brought black -- of 1867 that brought black suffrage to the south cause political organization. determined to exercise their new rights as citizens, thousands join the union league,...
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Mar 18, 2017
03/17
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it got the reputation of a great place to come if you are black. african americans were skilled artisans down at the milk compresses, they were the skilled artisans in the cotton mills and it was a great place and a cute friday black middle class. they had taken political power from the old democrats. remember in other states democrats and republicans were reversed. in 1898, the state democratic party's decided to quote unquote take back their state and their cities from what they thought was negro domination. their way of putting it. they wanted to take back all their elected offices there were coming up in 1898 which included a lot of the state offices, senators, but it didn't include city council what was then called the board of alderman. what they did was basically stole the election from inmidation, shotguns at the polling booth, stealing ballot boxes and leading up to that we had a war of words. a war of words took an interesting turn. there are kinds of anti-black speeches all all over the state the famous orator, was an x federal kernel. t
it got the reputation of a great place to come if you are black. african americans were skilled artisans down at the milk compresses, they were the skilled artisans in the cotton mills and it was a great place and a cute friday black middle class. they had taken political power from the old democrats. remember in other states democrats and republicans were reversed. in 1898, the state democratic party's decided to quote unquote take back their state and their cities from what they thought was...
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Mar 31, 2017
03/17
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COM
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>> we don't need to fake being black to support black people.still work with the naacp, white people can say "black lives matter," people can cysten to lemonade and be mad at jay-z. white people can wear a charcoal face mask but we cannot take a selfie. ( applause ) >> hold on! michelle, you're not black? >> no. >> so does this mean i can't call you my (bleep) anymore? >> that is 100% your decision, but i'm gonna hate it. >> that's my (bleep). >> trevor: michelle wolf and roy wood, jr., everybody! we'll be right [music plays throughout] ♪ ♪ [music fades out] say goodbye to extra taxes and fees on your wireless bill... ...and hello to t-mobile one. right now, get two lines of unlimited data for a hundred bucks. taxes and fees included! two lines, a hundred dollars, all in, all unlimited. switch today. could bounce back like it used to? neutrogena® hydro boost water gel. instantly quenches skin to keep it supple and hydrated day after day. with hydrating hyaluronic acid, which retains up to a thousand times its weight in water. this refreshing wat
>> we don't need to fake being black to support black people.still work with the naacp, white people can say "black lives matter," people can cysten to lemonade and be mad at jay-z. white people can wear a charcoal face mask but we cannot take a selfie. ( applause ) >> hold on! michelle, you're not black? >> no. >> so does this mean i can't call you my (bleep) anymore? >> that is 100% your decision, but i'm gonna hate it. >> that's my (bleep)....
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Mar 31, 2017
03/17
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>> we don't need to fake being black to support black people.lack people can still work with the naacp, white people can say "black lives matter," people can cysten to lemonade and be mad at jay-z. white people can wear a charcoal face mask but we cannot take a selfie. ( applause ) >> hold on! michelle, you're not black? >> no. >> so does this mean i can't call you my (bleep) anymore? >> that is 100% your decision, but i'm gonna hate it. >> that's my (bleep). >> trevor: michelle wolf and roy wood, jr., everybody! we'll be right it's about time they gave left and right twix® their own packs. they got about as much in common as you, a mortician, and me, an undertaker. (chuckling) or you, a janitor, and me, a custodian. (laughing) or you, a ghost, and me, a spirit. (laughing) new left and right twix® packs. it's time to deside. it's a lightly fruit flavored, under 95 calorie, spiked sparkling water. so now you can make the ultra light choice. henry's hard sparkling. the ultra light choice. experience exciting offers on sales event is here. our most
>> we don't need to fake being black to support black people.lack people can still work with the naacp, white people can say "black lives matter," people can cysten to lemonade and be mad at jay-z. white people can wear a charcoal face mask but we cannot take a selfie. ( applause ) >> hold on! michelle, you're not black? >> no. >> so does this mean i can't call you my (bleep) anymore? >> that is 100% your decision, but i'm gonna hate it. >> that's...
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Mar 12, 2017
03/17
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you look at the original black in washington. we are talking about the very names like hook and brandt and whirly. these were people who were here early. they had a leg up, and that included the opportunity to buy land that later became prime real estate. murray cana right after the war and he had those early pickings, too. he also invested in stocks and bonds. he had numerous houses. he was both a building entrepreneur. he hired 50 black man at any one time, and his father-in-law and his mother was his construction for men. and he built way over 100 structures in washington sometime.sometimes these were hr friends. sometimes they were spec houses. in one case he built three houses near logan circle. one for himself and to direct, and he built his house on at street, he rated all three of those. he also had properties in maryland. so he was a savvy investor, and given the stall he had in the library of congress, that served him well. >> yes. can you give us more of an insight into their political activism and the people they work
you look at the original black in washington. we are talking about the very names like hook and brandt and whirly. these were people who were here early. they had a leg up, and that included the opportunity to buy land that later became prime real estate. murray cana right after the war and he had those early pickings, too. he also invested in stocks and bonds. he had numerous houses. he was both a building entrepreneur. he hired 50 black man at any one time, and his father-in-law and his...
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Mar 1, 2017
03/17
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CSPAN3
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the university of alabama or do i want to go to a historically black college and university? it may be that way today, but not when they began. they were established because you know what the university of alabama said to african-american students? you can't come here. you are not welcome. you are not allowed to darken our doors. there was no choice. this was the the jim crowe era of racism and segregation. in 1862, president lincoln signed the act to provide for colleges in each state. in 17 of those states mainly in the south, black students were prohibited by law from attending these land grant colleges. the second moral act required a separate land grant college for blacks if they were excluded from existing colleges. many of our great hbcus like alabama a&m, florida a&m and lincoln university and my home state of missouri became public land grant colleges after the second morel act. not because someone thought they needed school choice but because racism left blacks without any choice. when blacks tried to attend schools like the university of alabama and mississippi, th
the university of alabama or do i want to go to a historically black college and university? it may be that way today, but not when they began. they were established because you know what the university of alabama said to african-american students? you can't come here. you are not welcome. you are not allowed to darken our doors. there was no choice. this was the the jim crowe era of racism and segregation. in 1862, president lincoln signed the act to provide for colleges in each state. in 17...
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Mar 11, 2017
03/17
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or the -- black skin or black bodies are good for labor and block people are physically superior beings and fit for picking cotton. so these were to normalize slavery so people wouldn't resist slavery and think that slave ray -- slavery was natural and normal and those benefiting from it would continue to benefit from it. so this book is sort of broken up into five sections. each section has a major character. in each of these characters serve as sort of windows to the larger racial debate in america, because really, when you talk about the history of racist ideas, you're really talking about the history of a debate between racist and antiracist ideas and you're talk about major and powerful people who were involved. like these ideas did not come out of nowhere. didn't come out of the desert. they came out of people's minds, although some of us would call those minds like desert if they've could create racist ideas. so, the third major character in this text is william lloyd garrison, and william lloyd garrison, if you're not familiar with the history of abolitionist movement is the mos
or the -- black skin or black bodies are good for labor and block people are physically superior beings and fit for picking cotton. so these were to normalize slavery so people wouldn't resist slavery and think that slave ray -- slavery was natural and normal and those benefiting from it would continue to benefit from it. so this book is sort of broken up into five sections. each section has a major character. in each of these characters serve as sort of windows to the larger racial debate in...
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Mar 11, 2017
03/17
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by going against all of these black -- mr. blight: kill a black man you kill his vote. professor greene medford: so as leader of the republican party certainly he would have a reason to do that. >> absolutely. which is one reason lincoln is talking about the franchise in 65 because the republican party as he sees it can become competitive in the south with black voters. >> to go back to a point david made before, the laws that congress passed authorizing grant to use moirbles and troops to suspend the -- marshalls and troops to suspend the writ of habeas corpus, the enforcement acts of 1870 and 1871 were kind of the furthest edge of national power you could go to in this period. they made individual crimes like murder, federal crimes. even today there's a lot of debate about that. you know, congress, i mean the supreme court not long ago -- well, some years ago but in the early part of the century overturned the violence against women's act based on reconstruction decisions saying, no, no. that's a state problem. yeah, violence against women is terrible but it's not a f
by going against all of these black -- mr. blight: kill a black man you kill his vote. professor greene medford: so as leader of the republican party certainly he would have a reason to do that. >> absolutely. which is one reason lincoln is talking about the franchise in 65 because the republican party as he sees it can become competitive in the south with black voters. >> to go back to a point david made before, the laws that congress passed authorizing grant to use moirbles and...
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Mar 26, 2017
03/17
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as a follow-up comment on the current black lives matter movement how that ties into the disparities of attitudes. >> one of the moments in this book there were virtually no black students at kent state who took part in the protest against the vietnam war not because they didn't have feelings but once the guard caught on campus they could see the danger where blacks and been subjected to police brutality the white kids were for rural places that had a naive view of the world so the moment on saturday night the cafeteria is open and a group of black students walked in and in herington he was in charge of the cafeteria here were all of the black panthers rushing in to set the table and said you see as here we are not out there we are here. they wanted to have a witness they were there for but the moment they said that the building catches on fire and it is filled with flames. it is a powerful moment. as for jackson state vs. kent state everybody says this cannot happen again on may 4th but then "selma's bloody sunday" jackson state to students were killed mississippi state policeman po
as a follow-up comment on the current black lives matter movement how that ties into the disparities of attitudes. >> one of the moments in this book there were virtually no black students at kent state who took part in the protest against the vietnam war not because they didn't have feelings but once the guard caught on campus they could see the danger where blacks and been subjected to police brutality the white kids were for rural places that had a naive view of the world so the moment...
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Mar 12, 2017
03/17
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for white and black people's. interest of kindergarten became part of the cause and identified early childhood intervention as one of the solutions to the race problem to be very well received and that is striking appearance because there was a strong genetic condition in the evans family to have premature white hairs that very young age still in her 20s and had a beautiful white hair and was tall and slender berry descriptions are available of her because she had such a striking appearance. so through all this action there was no real progress that is why i admire them for their race issues because it is frustrating. they would fight decade after decade. their jobs were lost or stalled in comes word decimated denied access to public facilities and they lost the prize they lost the vote. turning to the next generation the children died in was buried in a park like setting in washington but later it was deemed the cemetery was a health hazard and murray had to exhume the bodies of the little children and could find
for white and black people's. interest of kindergarten became part of the cause and identified early childhood intervention as one of the solutions to the race problem to be very well received and that is striking appearance because there was a strong genetic condition in the evans family to have premature white hairs that very young age still in her 20s and had a beautiful white hair and was tall and slender berry descriptions are available of her because she had such a striking appearance. so...
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Mar 19, 2017
03/17
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eye 52
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brought usally through was black man, black woman. i could tell you is at the if of this speech, it was as they were carrying me on their shoulders. it was a real lesson in leadership. thank god somebody who said it who is one of us. >> = one point handset it, it might be true but i didn't like the way he said it. now all of a sudden, someone is coming along and just say it's ok to talk about these things, these are serious problems, that is a real exercise in leadership. >> and it really taught me something in leadership by not know. it taught me something. that wey did teach me weronize black people when believe they do not want to hear self-evident truths and the burden is on us to find a way to say it so that they want to hear from us but not to assume it should not be set at all. i find the same thing about like verboten subjects what do you do if you are in a room and somebody said something that's anti-semitic? i know what you would say -- white people sit there and say usedng if some language is that is derogatory of blacks, t
brought usally through was black man, black woman. i could tell you is at the if of this speech, it was as they were carrying me on their shoulders. it was a real lesson in leadership. thank god somebody who said it who is one of us. >> = one point handset it, it might be true but i didn't like the way he said it. now all of a sudden, someone is coming along and just say it's ok to talk about these things, these are serious problems, that is a real exercise in leadership. >> and it...
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Mar 5, 2017
03/17
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since the children of black women become the property of their masters, if a master rapes a black woman, not only is there no danger of prison, but you increase your property as a result. you can be sure that rape was central to the institution of slavery. when nat turner, when you read the confessions, where the grievances, you can assume rape was there. and again, this is dangerous territory for historians to operate in. another thing, literacy. this is an institution it tries to prevent people who were enslaved from learning to read. why is that the case? multiple reasons. there is literature around. northerners are trying to send literature down. even in southern writings, if you were enslaved person and could read, you could read things that would undermine the institution of slavery. you could read the bible of your own. there is plenty to support slavery, plenty to attack it as well. probably under 5% of people who were enslaved learn to read learned to read. there are amazing stories of learning to read. religion masters want the slaves to learn a certain religion. the ability t
since the children of black women become the property of their masters, if a master rapes a black woman, not only is there no danger of prison, but you increase your property as a result. you can be sure that rape was central to the institution of slavery. when nat turner, when you read the confessions, where the grievances, you can assume rape was there. and again, this is dangerous territory for historians to operate in. another thing, literacy. this is an institution it tries to prevent...
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Mar 27, 2017
03/17
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KQEH
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it was the free black community.hite men and women and the location to which she ran that kept her safe. i think what is so incredible about this story is that for really the rest of george washington's life, he pursued her. had and so no matter how longg e lived or how long martha washington lived, ona judge knew that she was someone else' property and she remain that had for the entire of her life. it meant her children were also never to be free. >> sounds like a movie to me. how about we call at this time fugitive? i digress. it is a powerful story and this ought to be a movie. i think of the movie, hidden figures. how empowering that story was. and it reminds me, there are so many stories like these that we just don't know. people like you who dig it up and to unearth it. thank you for writing the book. it is called never caught. the relentless pursuit of the runaway slave, ona jflt up next, actor and comedian cheech marin with his memoir. stay with us. >>> cheech marvin best nobody as the one half of the comedy
it was the free black community.hite men and women and the location to which she ran that kept her safe. i think what is so incredible about this story is that for really the rest of george washington's life, he pursued her. had and so no matter how longg e lived or how long martha washington lived, ona judge knew that she was someone else' property and she remain that had for the entire of her life. it meant her children were also never to be free. >> sounds like a movie to me. how about...
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Mar 1, 2017
03/17
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colleges and universities and 80 predomina predominantly black institutions. this is a great day for membership and america. we came at the invitation of president trump who realizing the centrality of hbcus to the realization of his robust agenda whether it's education or economic development, whether or not it's revitalizing our higher distress or rural areas of distress, having a diverse excellent workforce, recognizing without thriving hbcus, cannot realize his goals to get america back on track again. we came back yesterday, 88 strong. my colleague set 88 before the record, 88 presidents, more hbcu presidents at any time in the white house together. we came and met for a good part of the day but we also met in the oval office with president trump and thereafter, met with the range of leadership executive leadership in the white house, and so we're pleased that under this administration, hbcus will not be peripheral issues but central to everything that goes on and we're looking forward to working with this administration and with the 115th congress to put
colleges and universities and 80 predomina predominantly black institutions. this is a great day for membership and america. we came at the invitation of president trump who realizing the centrality of hbcus to the realization of his robust agenda whether it's education or economic development, whether or not it's revitalizing our higher distress or rural areas of distress, having a diverse excellent workforce, recognizing without thriving hbcus, cannot realize his goals to get america back on...
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Mar 2, 2017
03/17
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WUSA
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it's not okay to air your black history month p.s.a. a day after black history month is over.ither air it on time or give black heme an extra month. thank you very much. ( chee and applause ) >> stephen: thank you, jon. thank you. we'll be right back with sir patrick stewart. stick around. lines? what lines? the chapstick total hydration collection. our advanced skin care formulas instantly smooth and transform your lips. chapstick. put yliour ps first. because when it comes to great tasting water... ♪ fill quickly and pour immediately, for great tasting water... fast. new brita stream. only tylenol® rapid release gels have laser drilled holes. they release medicine fast, for fast pain relief. tylenol® nobody does unlimited like t-mobile. while the other guys gouge for unlimited data... t-mobile one save you hundreds a year. right now get two lines of data for $100 dollars. with taxes and fees included. that's right 2 unlimited lines for just $100 bucks. all in. and right now, pair up th
it's not okay to air your black history month p.s.a. a day after black history month is over.ither air it on time or give black heme an extra month. thank you very much. ( chee and applause ) >> stephen: thank you, jon. thank you. we'll be right back with sir patrick stewart. stick around. lines? what lines? the chapstick total hydration collection. our advanced skin care formulas instantly smooth and transform your lips. chapstick. put yliour ps first. because when it comes to great...
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Mar 12, 2017
03/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 70
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these are directed mostly against blacks. the judicial system is warped so that white people are not prosecuted for these things and blacks are. and then it is a way of taking away the right to vote. under the 15th amendment, you could not pass a law saying black people cannot vote anymore. that would be in direct violation of the 15 amendment. there are all these other ways. felon disenfranchisement was one of them, literacy tests, pull tests, all of them extensively nonracial but really directed toward limiting the power of african-americans. but really the prison system , that we live with today is a relatively modern thing. go back to 1960, there were not that many people in federal prisons. it burgeoned starting with the johnson administration and then in the 1970's, 1980's, and the war on drugs. things like that. today, there are millions of people who have lost the right to vote because of these laws saying if you are convicted of a felony, you can never vote. it is not just while you are in jail or something but even
these are directed mostly against blacks. the judicial system is warped so that white people are not prosecuted for these things and blacks are. and then it is a way of taking away the right to vote. under the 15th amendment, you could not pass a law saying black people cannot vote anymore. that would be in direct violation of the 15 amendment. there are all these other ways. felon disenfranchisement was one of them, literacy tests, pull tests, all of them extensively nonracial but really...
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Mar 2, 2017
03/17
by
KPIX
tv
eye 234
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just say black people.nd if that makes you feel uncomfortable, well, then you should probably meet more urban people. ( laughter ). >> hey, white people! if you feel left out during black history month, just remember that you played a pretty giant role in black history, too. >> what is his name? willis! from "different strokes." that's who i was talking about. true story. >> jon: hey, white people. it's not okay to air your black history month p.s.a. a day after black history month is over. either air it on time or give black heme an extra month. thank you very much. ( cheers and applause ) >> stephen: thank you, jon. thank you. we'll be right back with sir patrick stewart. stick around. lines? what lines? the chapstick total hydration collection. our advanced skin care formulas instantly smooth and transform your lips. chapstick. put your lips first. because when it comes to great tasting water... ♪ fill quickly and pour immediately, for great tasting water... fast. new brita stream. only tylenol® rapid re
just say black people.nd if that makes you feel uncomfortable, well, then you should probably meet more urban people. ( laughter ). >> hey, white people! if you feel left out during black history month, just remember that you played a pretty giant role in black history, too. >> what is his name? willis! from "different strokes." that's who i was talking about. true story. >> jon: hey, white people. it's not okay to air your black history month p.s.a. a day after...
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Mar 28, 2017
03/17
by
COM
tv
eye 127
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to show a black woman kicking ass. of using a boot, she's putting that pump in that ass, like -- >> trevor: she definitely is getting in there. >> she's getting in there. >> trevor: what i liked about the story is it tackles issues from an interesting perspective. >> yes, inside. she's inside the police department, then she becomes disillusioned with everything that is going on around her, and it's like how the insider goes from becoming an insider to an outsider and tries to deal justice in her own way. >> trevor: it's interesting you say that because we've seen stories recently of black people and police officers having issues, and what's more interesting is seeing how black police are having to security that line because you're still a black person and a police officer and you're seen as a a traitor in both communities depending on what you say. >> exactly. there was a post a couple of years ago from this black woman who was talking about what she was going through being a cop and she feels some of her colleagues sh
to show a black woman kicking ass. of using a boot, she's putting that pump in that ass, like -- >> trevor: she definitely is getting in there. >> she's getting in there. >> trevor: what i liked about the story is it tackles issues from an interesting perspective. >> yes, inside. she's inside the police department, then she becomes disillusioned with everything that is going on around her, and it's like how the insider goes from becoming an insider to an outsider and...
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108
Mar 2, 2017
03/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 108
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i said, my chief of staff is black. jerry moran's chief of staff is black.s lankford's communications director is black. thom -- they said the democrats won't give us promotions in the senate, not the republicans. and i said oh! and they said if you go on t.v. and talk about this all things will change.anyway, when you blow it you just move on. speaking about television, i should realize too many democrats are in the room. as you know, hollywood has not been the biggest fan of president trump. actually they have been in revolt. people say hollywood, washington is the hollywood for nerds. well, i just wonder -- besides washington and hollywood are actually very different. one is a place that produces fantasy and fiction with jealousy over who gets the best roles, enormous egos and a lot of backstabbing. and the other is where they make movies. [laughter] thinking about big news, has anyone seen the controversy around kellyanne conway and the sofa in the oval office? come on people! remember the 90s. that count has had a whole lot worse things come on now. [la
i said, my chief of staff is black. jerry moran's chief of staff is black.s lankford's communications director is black. thom -- they said the democrats won't give us promotions in the senate, not the republicans. and i said oh! and they said if you go on t.v. and talk about this all things will change.anyway, when you blow it you just move on. speaking about television, i should realize too many democrats are in the room. as you know, hollywood has not been the biggest fan of president trump....
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Mar 25, 2017
03/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 49
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blacks are being stopped?ernie sanders says african-american youth is especially back to my stand america ushered spend another trillion dollars to get them jobs and education. the there is any group that has a right to claim victimhood it is blacks after slavery the government forced segregation but kira davis says blackstone need special help. they don't? [laughter] >> shockingly we can take care of ourselves. black culture is probably one of the struggles cultures in america and there is a good case to re-read one of the purest forms of real american culture. black culture is pop culture john: you have everything. >> we have everything. [applause] john: the music and the movies. >> two words. kanye west. [laughter] black people in this country have literally built america on our backs coming from nothing we had nothing demanded the right to have but was constitutionally guaranteed, i got that, marched got the right to vote and to work and to each and mary who we want. we did tattersalls. somewhere along the
blacks are being stopped?ernie sanders says african-american youth is especially back to my stand america ushered spend another trillion dollars to get them jobs and education. the there is any group that has a right to claim victimhood it is blacks after slavery the government forced segregation but kira davis says blackstone need special help. they don't? [laughter] >> shockingly we can take care of ourselves. black culture is probably one of the struggles cultures in america and there...
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Mar 5, 2017
03/17
by
CSPAN
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eye 146
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what is black enough?ustmatter of fact, earlier this year, a tv producer called and said, we are interested in doing a reality tv show about you and corey. [laughter] tim scott: i was like really? ,who will be the focus of this tv show? and they said, you will. and i was like all right. what is the name of the show? they said, 50 shades darker. [laughter] imaginet: i just can't what it would be if it was me and g.k. butterfield. it would be like, 100 shades darker. [laughter] tim scott: people -- people wonder why i never joined the congressional black caucus. i can just tell you, when they -- when gk asked me to join, i said, why would i want to join a black group run by a white dude? in the south, we call that a plantation. [laughter] tim scott: i am just saying. i am just saying. speaking of black people, -- [laughter] tim scott: speaking of black people, it is common, it is common knowledge, it is common knowledge that the first black president was actually bill clinton. we have heard that for a long t
what is black enough?ustmatter of fact, earlier this year, a tv producer called and said, we are interested in doing a reality tv show about you and corey. [laughter] tim scott: i was like really? ,who will be the focus of this tv show? and they said, you will. and i was like all right. what is the name of the show? they said, 50 shades darker. [laughter] imaginet: i just can't what it would be if it was me and g.k. butterfield. it would be like, 100 shades darker. [laughter] tim scott: people...
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Mar 5, 2017
03/17
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MSNBCW
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so, 90% of black people who went to college went to historically black colleges and universities. my father and mother both went to historically black colleges and afforded me, you know, and my siblings, the life that i have and then my kids the life that they have, all coming out of historically black colleges and universities. and i think it's really important that we understand that history and understand that this was not a choice. there was no place else you could go. and historically black colleges were formed mainly by african-americans to fill that need, because this was the only place that we could go, and we believed in education. >> right. >> we believed education was the way out. >> dr. lomax, do you get a sense from your conversations with the trump administration that they understand the significance that stanley nelson just brought and that you've given your life to in terms of the importance of these institutions, even going forward? because when you see the tweet by the education secretary, betsy devos, it's almost like they really don't even understand the histor
so, 90% of black people who went to college went to historically black colleges and universities. my father and mother both went to historically black colleges and afforded me, you know, and my siblings, the life that i have and then my kids the life that they have, all coming out of historically black colleges and universities. and i think it's really important that we understand that history and understand that this was not a choice. there was no place else you could go. and historically...
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189
Mar 5, 2017
03/17
by
CSPAN2
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eye 189
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and it was with a black man was burned to death.he records how a man was accused of rape, and as we know from reading history there were lots of accusations of this type. no proof, no trial, no justice really. but what marti points out is that a woman cries that she was assaulted. the word often used was offended, and her word is taken. a man is arrested and 5000 people gather to watch her set this man on fire. now, imagine that people come to watch something like that. the other thing i found in researching this book is about lynchings were often like this in the south. going into the 20th century, that crowds gathered and watched. and i know that marti was, most of them thinking we should not have something like this in cuba. now, slaves in colonial cuba, many of them worked in sugarcane, arduous work, slave populations game, worked, died many accounts say that the population of colonial latin america was the shortest lifespan was at a slaves, particularly those working in sugarcane. it's hard to cut, and then the factory model of
and it was with a black man was burned to death.he records how a man was accused of rape, and as we know from reading history there were lots of accusations of this type. no proof, no trial, no justice really. but what marti points out is that a woman cries that she was assaulted. the word often used was offended, and her word is taken. a man is arrested and 5000 people gather to watch her set this man on fire. now, imagine that people come to watch something like that. the other thing i found...
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273
Mar 5, 2017
03/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 273
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in the black neighborhood, you had these trailers to augment the population of black students and under crowding in the white schools. they started protesting that to say that brown versus board of education requires that the schools be integrated to the extent possible. we have to get it fixed here in chicago. mr. bond: do you remember at this young age, when you go to this new school, did you have any larger thoughts on what this meant to the larger world, the larger united states? what brown might mean nationwide? senator braun: at that point, i did not. i did later. we had in unusual household, because my parents did not consider themselves bohemians, but we were surrounded by artists and musicians. people from a lot of different walks of life. we always had an integrated household. there were always discussions of race relations and development in the larger communities. even as a small child, i was acutely aware of the efforts of people to build an integrated society. mr. bond: i'm guessing hopeful that it will be a good thing that will happen? senator braun: i just assumed, weres
in the black neighborhood, you had these trailers to augment the population of black students and under crowding in the white schools. they started protesting that to say that brown versus board of education requires that the schools be integrated to the extent possible. we have to get it fixed here in chicago. mr. bond: do you remember at this young age, when you go to this new school, did you have any larger thoughts on what this meant to the larger world, the larger united states? what brown...
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Mar 1, 2017
03/17
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MSNBCW
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eye 83
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the black community.oday he had an opportunity to finally reach people who didn't vote for him with the hbcu historically black college and universities executive order. if you read that order there's no new money, no new funding. he had, if you saw the photos from that -- >> let me push back on that a little bit. there was a photo op. >> exactly. if you talk to the people who were there after looking at the executive order there's nothing will, no new money, there's nothing will. >> that and 2.75 will get you on the subway. >> exactly. >> and the thing with chicago if he really had a commitment to black citizens in all these places he wants to lift because he just found out about them, it's like what about jobs programs, forwardable housing, you're talking about coal miners and industry that's have been dead for 30 years why not think of substantive jobs in cities. cities get ignored when we talk about jobs programs and we move out to the rural areas but what about sub ststantive education. >> to your po
the black community.oday he had an opportunity to finally reach people who didn't vote for him with the hbcu historically black college and universities executive order. if you read that order there's no new money, no new funding. he had, if you saw the photos from that -- >> let me push back on that a little bit. there was a photo op. >> exactly. if you talk to the people who were there after looking at the executive order there's nothing will, no new money, there's nothing will....
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52
Mar 26, 2017
03/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 52
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ever black, british black, though as i think there was one student who got in, this one year and i thought, i just assumed it was a typo. two years later, this counselor came out, a member of parliament and he basically like plastic and he wrote an op-ed and said that our colleges, so the college system where no vaccine has been admitted in five years. so this comment play of exclusion in britain. it's just not kind in the public domain. people just don't talk about because i don't think about their society as a kind of racialized society. i think in the united states we please have a bit of attention. i argued book we can do a lot more but we have the history of the civil rights movement which really sort of come and desegregation and this really put race front and center in the united states in a way i think is a helpful start. i think we're a long way to go but i think that is the difference in the uk for shipping and uk they think of itself as a postcolonial society in some sense. but even that is very muted. britain sees itself as a sort of annapolis, there was this neville and coloni
ever black, british black, though as i think there was one student who got in, this one year and i thought, i just assumed it was a typo. two years later, this counselor came out, a member of parliament and he basically like plastic and he wrote an op-ed and said that our colleges, so the college system where no vaccine has been admitted in five years. so this comment play of exclusion in britain. it's just not kind in the public domain. people just don't talk about because i don't think about...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 2, 2017
03/17
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SFGTV
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eye 253
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we are a black museum and not just for black people. we are for all resident of san francisco and visitors of san francisco and we do this because the african diaspramuseum we literally share and give provocative exhibitions and relevant public programming and these great education programs where we go fl to the classrooms because we want to be the anchor for the city. it is at our museum that african americans, afro asians, afro brazil whereins afro jewish, afro caribbean rfx it is all of these diaspras that come to the museum and it is a safe place in order to talk about culture and race. for the next 4 years we want to make sure that that place is sacred and that people of all different diaspra come and i cannot say how much i love doing this work on behalf of the museum because we hope that what we provide is a partnership for the city to send its folks who visit to you to come to the museum so that at any time that you just want to sit and think about art and culture, the museum of the african diaspra is the place to be and we are
we are a black museum and not just for black people. we are for all resident of san francisco and visitors of san francisco and we do this because the african diaspramuseum we literally share and give provocative exhibitions and relevant public programming and these great education programs where we go fl to the classrooms because we want to be the anchor for the city. it is at our museum that african americans, afro asians, afro brazil whereins afro jewish, afro caribbean rfx it is all of...
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140
Mar 26, 2017
03/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 140
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and if it's a 10, it's worth north of $5,000. >> so, what about the black swamp find? do karl's cards make the grade? what was your reaction when you saw the first cards? >> it was just -- it was mind-blowing. >> before the black swamp find, the highest grade psa ever gave to a card in that series was a 7. karl's cards beat that in their first at-bat. >> it was a ty cobb and it graded a psa mint 9. little did we know that there were 15 more ty cobb 9s and, of course, hundreds of high-grade 8s, 9s, and even 10s in the set. >> sounds pretty good, right? not so fast. the collection doubles the known population of this type of card, and the unprecedented size and quality of the find could crash the baseball-card-collectors market. will karl's inheritance end up being too much of a good thing? >> if you were to flood the market with all of this at one time, it would certainly diminish the value of the entire find. >> that's next. >> here's another quiz question for you. the answer in a moment. dear predictable, there's no other way to say this. it's over. i've found a perma
and if it's a 10, it's worth north of $5,000. >> so, what about the black swamp find? do karl's cards make the grade? what was your reaction when you saw the first cards? >> it was just -- it was mind-blowing. >> before the black swamp find, the highest grade psa ever gave to a card in that series was a 7. karl's cards beat that in their first at-bat. >> it was a ty cobb and it graded a psa mint 9. little did we know that there were 15 more ty cobb 9s and, of course,...
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76
Mar 4, 2017
03/17
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 76
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black market pain pills is another culprit. opioid dealing organizations like pill city are purchases of stolen drugs too. the franchise in new orleans is a clearing house for pharmacy labs looking to unload their elicit haul. after ripping off a drugstore a perpetrator can sell them at street value an arrangement pill city one of the largest known buyers of stolen opioids in america. when the law enforcement and crack down show they switch to heroin since it offers the same high as pain kills but at $5-$10 a day is cheaper. pill city made pills affordable to poor minorities even as whites were being priced out of the market. now, bgf are the guys you come to when you have product you want to unload. data compiled by the cdc records stkts and law enforcement filings and public katea indicates opioids sold on the black market are killing african-americans in higher numbers than whites. quote with regard to over dose deaths caused by ill licit opioids black people are suffering dispor -- disproportionately. when the data only ref
black market pain pills is another culprit. opioid dealing organizations like pill city are purchases of stolen drugs too. the franchise in new orleans is a clearing house for pharmacy labs looking to unload their elicit haul. after ripping off a drugstore a perpetrator can sell them at street value an arrangement pill city one of the largest known buyers of stolen opioids in america. when the law enforcement and crack down show they switch to heroin since it offers the same high as pain kills...
111
111
Mar 20, 2017
03/17
by
KQEH
tv
eye 111
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in this film i remember black folks sweating. know, i remember the skin replenishing itself, being moist, that's alive. in this film the make-up person was told no powder, only oil. you got grapeseed oil, jojoba oil, shea butter, to allow skin to reflect the light. i think our visual approach because it's coming from my memory of what it felt like to live this experience, and we're allowing ourselves to be rooted in the collection of the character, it arrives fresh and different. i think people when they see the images, receive them, they feel like they're seeing things for the first time even though they may have seen a story like there before, they haven't seen it told in this way. the visuals have a lot to do with that. >> it must make you feel awfully good to know that not only is the film nominated, screenplay, adapted screenplay, film for best picture, as i said earlier, best director for you. you have two cast members nominated for big awards. talk to me about the casting. clearly in retrospect it was brilliant casting. wh
in this film i remember black folks sweating. know, i remember the skin replenishing itself, being moist, that's alive. in this film the make-up person was told no powder, only oil. you got grapeseed oil, jojoba oil, shea butter, to allow skin to reflect the light. i think our visual approach because it's coming from my memory of what it felt like to live this experience, and we're allowing ourselves to be rooted in the collection of the character, it arrives fresh and different. i think people...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
145
145
Mar 7, 2017
03/17
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
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we are a black museum and not just for black people. we are for all resident of san francisco and visitors of san francisco and we do this because the african diaspramuseum we literally share and give provocative exhibitions and relevant public programming and these great education programs where we go fl to the classrooms because we want to be the anchor for the city. it is at our museum that african americans, afro asians, afro brazil whereins afro jewish, afro caribbean rfx it is all of these diaspras that come to the museum and it is a safe place in order to talk about culture and race. for the next 4 years we want to make sure that that place is sacred and that people of all different diaspra come and i cannot say how much i love doing this work on behalf of the museum because we hope that what we provide is a partnership for the city to send its folks who visit to you to come to the museum so that at any time that you just want to sit and think about art and culture, the museum of the african diaspra is the place to be and we are
we are a black museum and not just for black people. we are for all resident of san francisco and visitors of san francisco and we do this because the african diaspramuseum we literally share and give provocative exhibitions and relevant public programming and these great education programs where we go fl to the classrooms because we want to be the anchor for the city. it is at our museum that african americans, afro asians, afro brazil whereins afro jewish, afro caribbean rfx it is all of...
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61
Mar 27, 2017
03/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
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british black -- there was i think there was one student who got in. this one year i thought that i assumed it was a typo and then two years later this -- counselor came out and a government member of parliament and he basically like blasted he wrote op-ed said there are colleges so the college system where no black student has been admitted in five years so there's plenty of exclusion in britain it's just not in public l do main and people don't think about their society as a -- the kind of racialized society. and you know, i think of the united states we at least pay it a little bit of attention you know, i argue in the book we can do a lot more. but we have the history of the civil right the movement which really sort of, you know, and desegregation and race up front and center in the united states in a way i think was a helpful start. ic we have a long way to go but ting that is different in the u.k. for sure. the u.k. they think of thelses as post clone yum society in some sense, and but even that is very muted, you know, britain kind of sees itse
british black -- there was i think there was one student who got in. this one year i thought that i assumed it was a typo and then two years later this -- counselor came out and a government member of parliament and he basically like blasted he wrote op-ed said there are colleges so the college system where no black student has been admitted in five years so there's plenty of exclusion in britain it's just not in public l do main and people don't think about their society as a -- the kind of...