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Jun 22, 2021
06/21
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also the supreme court in decision by justice harris blackman issues a new test. now the attorney general didn't have to give a reason for why he was denying the waiver. what justice blackman says you have to get a legitimate and modified reason for denying that waiver. that's a low standard. that's lower than strict scrutiny or any first amendment speech to protect the standard. but it's a standard, nonetheless. and it does require a reason. it's the standard that we use today. so this is a foundational case. very important precedent that is set with earnest mandel and so unfortunately earnest mandel is excluded, we do have the new standard and the new pathway to challenge exclusion. what is also significant is that this is part of the nixon administration effort to suppress the descend on college campuses and protests as well as parking lot -- part of using immigration law as a tool and part of his abuse of power. at the same time the nixon administration excludes w.e.b. debois' widow and attempts to throw out john lennon. i call it selective deportation. target
also the supreme court in decision by justice harris blackman issues a new test. now the attorney general didn't have to give a reason for why he was denying the waiver. what justice blackman says you have to get a legitimate and modified reason for denying that waiver. that's a low standard. that's lower than strict scrutiny or any first amendment speech to protect the standard. but it's a standard, nonetheless. and it does require a reason. it's the standard that we use today. so this is a...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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my colleague may be critical of justice blackman's opinion in roe v. wade. but these restrictions on health care interfere with that basic right. i thinkom the statute requires truth telling, privacy and the protection of a woman's right to make decisions about when to have a child. last month texas passed an extreme law that would allow anyone that helps a a patient g abortion dicare, including providing the abortion as well as providing financial help or even driving them to the appointment to be sued in a court of law. doctor -- professor goodwin, could youhe walk us through the effects of thator texas law and others like it on the availability of abortion care? >> thank you very much for that question, senator. yes, i'd be happy to do that and then to make additional comments. with the texas law, one of the things that itva does is it private citizens to file lawsuits against individuals who are assisting individuals and terminating a pregnancy againste physicians, against individuals who may be seeking to terminate a pregnancy. andda that vigilantism is
my colleague may be critical of justice blackman's opinion in roe v. wade. but these restrictions on health care interfere with that basic right. i thinkom the statute requires truth telling, privacy and the protection of a woman's right to make decisions about when to have a child. last month texas passed an extreme law that would allow anyone that helps a a patient g abortion dicare, including providing the abortion as well as providing financial help or even driving them to the appointment...
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but to know that there was a blackman based on the time, of course not. why was loss of the annals of history was because of course, a lot of people you can go back to, to someone, for example, like totally connie, who was the 1st manager, black manager for rochdale. we want to lead cut that no one knows about. we assume that black, starting with the band isn't on black matters, just started with in the eighty's or ninety's whenever the 1st black manager came along. so of course, we don't know much about the historical aspect of so many black figures in history, and that was very interesting to really delve into under watson. and the 18 eighty's was secretary of queens park, then the club in the world. he was the 1st black football administrator. so what does that tell us about the lack of progress in 150 years? it's before as tony collins, the 1st black manager in england who managed ross dale not a big club for 6 years. and one of the lead up, but he wasn't particularly successful rossville. however, apart from the leecock, however, you stated a job 7 y
but to know that there was a blackman based on the time, of course not. why was loss of the annals of history was because of course, a lot of people you can go back to, to someone, for example, like totally connie, who was the 1st manager, black manager for rochdale. we want to lead cut that no one knows about. we assume that black, starting with the band isn't on black matters, just started with in the eighty's or ninety's whenever the 1st black manager came along. so of course, we don't know...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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, we have the largest maximum security prison in the country with a vast majority of people who blackman's licenses work in the field of what we once a plantation, someone watches, i'm on horseback with a gun over there where they work for virtually no pe. and so what does it mean that that police exist in that context? in that moment? what does it mean? how does white supremacy normally it acts physical violence against people's bodies, but also number collectively to certain types of violence. it doesn't mean that that place has a gift shop. right? there's a, there's a gift shop at the largest maximum security prison in the country where they sell shot glasses and coffee mugs and stuffed animals and the sweatshirt and baseball cap. there was a prison mode, or they were the a coffee mode that had a silhouette of a washed house on it. and it said in gold community, i'm looking at your twitter feed right now. you look at that, you like, what the, what's right. it is, it's not only that this place is not interested in any sort of interrogation of its relationship which is bad, but that it is
, we have the largest maximum security prison in the country with a vast majority of people who blackman's licenses work in the field of what we once a plantation, someone watches, i'm on horseback with a gun over there where they work for virtually no pe. and so what does it mean that that police exist in that context? in that moment? what does it mean? how does white supremacy normally it acts physical violence against people's bodies, but also number collectively to certain types of...
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Jun 27, 2021
06/21
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you've got blackman the author of roe versus wade. you have john paul stevens.david suitor. i can think of five republican-nominated justices that surprised us with their lack of conservative activism. i can't think of a single democrat-nominated justice that shocked us on the other side. am i missing one? >> you know, not as much. i mean, you will see instances where justice kagan will actually side with some of the more conservative justices, you know, on the court. i mean, you know, not nearly as much and on a repeated basis as we have seen from the justices who have been nominated by republican presidents, but i think, you know, there's one reason i think that could be the case, and you even look at the decision, this recent one upholding the affordable care act, in which barrett voted against striking it down as unconstitutional, and that decision was based not really on the constitutionality of the affordable care act. it's that the plaintiffs didn't have standing to bring that suit because they couldn't show injury. and so i think what we see when we nomi
you've got blackman the author of roe versus wade. you have john paul stevens.david suitor. i can think of five republican-nominated justices that surprised us with their lack of conservative activism. i can't think of a single democrat-nominated justice that shocked us on the other side. am i missing one? >> you know, not as much. i mean, you will see instances where justice kagan will actually side with some of the more conservative justices, you know, on the court. i mean, you know,...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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seems more truthful than not but the idea that a white woman could have welcomed the advances of a blackmanthat would have been the end of her social life, maybe her life so you can understand why her husband or other people what happened pressured to say it was rate as opposed to something else and that was the story told in the black community so there is that incident, members of my family, even before this, there was an incident where a man was burned at the stake alive on the courthouse square and it was advertised that it would happen, people showed up and it was like a picnic and it was hard to imagine that people did this but people brought their kids so the town had a reputation for being very tough racially. the clan was there as well so yeah, that's why my father -- what he was saying is this is still a pretty rough place. they had -- white texans had grown accustomed to the social life under slavery and soon after juneteenth, after reconstruction, juneteenth as a matter of fact when people were celebrating, there were instances when people who were celebrating him at the patient
seems more truthful than not but the idea that a white woman could have welcomed the advances of a blackmanthat would have been the end of her social life, maybe her life so you can understand why her husband or other people what happened pressured to say it was rate as opposed to something else and that was the story told in the black community so there is that incident, members of my family, even before this, there was an incident where a man was burned at the stake alive on the courthouse...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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my favourite author is mallorie blackman. ilike reading... most specifically his recent...from ethnic minority backgrounds, but only a small number of authors in the english literature curriculum are from these groups, according to new research by the publisher penguin and race equality think tank the runnymede trust. i feel like you internalise a lot of the things you read. so, if i'm reading a book or a novel and people like me are depicted in a certain way, i start to believe i'm the same as that, and the truth is i'm not, so we deserve representation. i feel as though, especially in the younger years, the texts that are chosen it's, like, they weren't chosen with the students in mind. the research analysed gcse exam boards data from more than half a million students in england in 2019. it found fewer than 1% answered a question on a book by a black, asian, or ethnic minority author. while more than 80% said they couldn't recall ever studying a book by an author from an ethnic minority background. and just 7% had answered a question on a book by a woman at gcse. some of
my favourite author is mallorie blackman. ilike reading... most specifically his recent...from ethnic minority backgrounds, but only a small number of authors in the english literature curriculum are from these groups, according to new research by the publisher penguin and race equality think tank the runnymede trust. i feel like you internalise a lot of the things you read. so, if i'm reading a book or a novel and people like me are depicted in a certain way, i start to believe i'm the same as...
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Jun 12, 2021
06/21
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that people come down talkn about suffrage, they met about blackman having to vote that did voter registrationve drives. they became very important to the community. that community basically survived until my generation. my father when he discovered those journals on the back of the dump truck he discovered them because his friend was a member of the economy society. his friend was one of the last members and he said the hall had been sold and they were getting rid of everything that was in there. nobody wanted these books so they sent them to the dump. this sort of storytelling and connecting we know more than 100 years. >> so now let's talk about the physical documents. your father took them youou describe a beautifully and building a cupboard to put them in and staining it. very luckily having a house that was elevated enough that katrina for example did not fdamage these documents which were already water damaged. you mentioned your father had to put them out in the sun and let them dry because they had gotten arraigned on this adulterer, which is have to say painful to think about. but then
that people come down talkn about suffrage, they met about blackman having to vote that did voter registrationve drives. they became very important to the community. that community basically survived until my generation. my father when he discovered those journals on the back of the dump truck he discovered them because his friend was a member of the economy society. his friend was one of the last members and he said the hall had been sold and they were getting rid of everything that was in...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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CNNW
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it just seems so surreal to me that a young blackman was murdered in my city by the police. in front of his mother. then when you talk about that percentage and philly being majority black, but so many young black people here feel so unseen, unheard, uncared for, unloved. black folks, a lot of times we tell ourselves we got to mute this black pain. come on. you think you should put all this black pain out here. haven't we put enough -- what? 27-year-old young man who was mentally suffering, needed some help and got the opposite. and it's painful for a momma to see her son murdered. you want me to not give you this black pain story? i don't think so. i don't think so. medicine works in a rich body just as well as a poor body. ♪ it's as effective in 90210 as it is in 86503. ♪ medicine will not discriminate against the color of your skin. ♪ medicine pays no attention to the borders we draw to divide ourselves from each other. ♪ because the body you are randomly assigned at birth ♪ shouldn't determine how well you are cared for. ♪ or how hard we work to find answers, partners, a
it just seems so surreal to me that a young blackman was murdered in my city by the police. in front of his mother. then when you talk about that percentage and philly being majority black, but so many young black people here feel so unseen, unheard, uncared for, unloved. black folks, a lot of times we tell ourselves we got to mute this black pain. come on. you think you should put all this black pain out here. haven't we put enough -- what? 27-year-old young man who was mentally suffering,...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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but for me, what is as they ultimately about the recent the blackman are not available.he ultimate problems. our daughters granddaughters where the going to have if we don't take up this issue is a systemic and structural issue. that's what i would like my readers to consider. to consider active wherever they are in all of these organizations that are pursuing the rights for black people. have they considered how the problems that they are working on and intersect with problems there with the black families and black love relationships and white marriages. i think that would be very helpful but most of all, what black woman in to not blame themselves, to understand the problem is bigger than any individual choice they make about their dating lives for their marriage lives or couples arrangements. and that there is something we can do about it. the personal life and in our public life. and if people read the book, they will seek that at the end, i talked about three particular issues that we should get on pork with and start working on if we want to turn around this probl
but for me, what is as they ultimately about the recent the blackman are not available.he ultimate problems. our daughters granddaughters where the going to have if we don't take up this issue is a systemic and structural issue. that's what i would like my readers to consider. to consider active wherever they are in all of these organizations that are pursuing the rights for black people. have they considered how the problems that they are working on and intersect with problems there with the...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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eye 106
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my favourite author is mallory blackman. i like reading akala.s in the english literature curriculum from these groups, according to new research by the publisher penguin and runnymede trust think tank for race equality. i feel like you internalise a lot of the things you read, so from reading a book or a novel and people like me are depicted in a certain way, i start to believe that i am the same as that and the truth is, i am not. so we deserve representation. i feel that especially in younger years, the texts that are chosen, it is like they were not chosen with the students in mind. the research analysed gcse exam board data for more than half a million students in england in 2019. it found fewer than 1% answered a question on a book by a black, asian, or ethnic minority author while more than 80% said they couldn't recall ever studying a book by an author from an ethnic minority background. and just 7% had answered a question on a book by a woman at gcse. some of britain most well—known black writers say change has been too slow. we have to
my favourite author is mallory blackman. i like reading akala.s in the english literature curriculum from these groups, according to new research by the publisher penguin and runnymede trust think tank for race equality. i feel like you internalise a lot of the things you read, so from reading a book or a novel and people like me are depicted in a certain way, i start to believe that i am the same as that and the truth is, i am not. so we deserve representation. i feel that especially in...
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Jun 2, 2021
06/21
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douglass moved to rochester, new york, a newspaperman, already most famous blackman in the country, virtually a household name. becomes famous overnight because of his autobiography which is a best seller, in this sense similar to obama. and he writes about lincoln in the context of lincoln's term in congress, and douglass refers to lincoln as part of rogue's gallery of congressmen who oppose a bill to abolish slavery in washington, d.c.. and why does lincoln oppose this bill to abolish slavery in washington, d.c., as a congressman? because it deviates from lincoln's strategy for ending slavery. lincoln hated slavery, said it numerous occasions he hated slavery as much as any abolitionist and there's no reason to doubt that. but his strategy to end slavery was three-fold, gradual, genial, not to uproot society. in debates with stephen douglas, when do i think slavery will end? not less than 100 years. would have placed end of slavery at very earliest barring civil war in 1958. a very gradual end. and lincoln advocated compensation to masters for the loss of their property. which this bill in
douglass moved to rochester, new york, a newspaperman, already most famous blackman in the country, virtually a household name. becomes famous overnight because of his autobiography which is a best seller, in this sense similar to obama. and he writes about lincoln in the context of lincoln's term in congress, and douglass refers to lincoln as part of rogue's gallery of congressmen who oppose a bill to abolish slavery in washington, d.c.. and why does lincoln oppose this bill to abolish slavery...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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the author of that decision, justice blackman, was just going to go three months. he got a letter put out by thurgood marshall who wanted it to be much higher. i can't tell you exactly how many abortions in the past we had in this country buts probably over five million. that was because thurgood marshall was in the right, the wrong position, however you want to look at it, to go from three months to making america one of seven countries in the world where they allow abortions so late. of those countries include north korea, vietnam, red china. not countries you want to be associated with. if this bill becomes law and we walk through there we'll see thurgood marshall. at least i will always look at him as the guy who weighed in and felt after abortion was largely -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. mr. loudermilk: i yield another 30 seconds. mr. grothman: the guy who kind of put the foot on the gas and legalized late-term abortion, put the united states in with those other six countries. so for that reason, i'm going to vote against this b
the author of that decision, justice blackman, was just going to go three months. he got a letter put out by thurgood marshall who wanted it to be much higher. i can't tell you exactly how many abortions in the past we had in this country buts probably over five million. that was because thurgood marshall was in the right, the wrong position, however you want to look at it, to go from three months to making america one of seven countries in the world where they allow abortions so late. of those...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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the author of that decision, justice blackman, was just going to go three months. he got a letter put out by thurgood marshall who wanted it to be much higher. i can't tell you exactly how many abortions in the past we had in this country buts probably over five million. that was because thurgood marshall was in the right, the wrong position, however you want to look at it, to go from three months to making america one of seven countries in the world where they allow abortions so late. of those countries include north korea, vietnam, red china. not countries you want to be associated with. if this bill becomes law and we walk through there we'll see thurgood marshall. at least i will always look at him as the guy who weighed in and felt after abortion was largely -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. mr. loudermilk: i yield another 30 seconds. mr. grothman: the guy who kind of put the foot on the gas and legalized late-term abortion, put the united states in with those other six countries. so for that reason, i'm going to vote against this b
the author of that decision, justice blackman, was just going to go three months. he got a letter put out by thurgood marshall who wanted it to be much higher. i can't tell you exactly how many abortions in the past we had in this country buts probably over five million. that was because thurgood marshall was in the right, the wrong position, however you want to look at it, to go from three months to making america one of seven countries in the world where they allow abortions so late. of those...