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May 14, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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davis remains. remington makes arrangements to return home, go back to the states, go back to new york on board the passenger steaier the seneca. and upon his return home, the journal begins prominent pucks of remington's sketches of the cuban conflict. they praised these sketches in headlines, saying they are the work of a gifted artist, frederick remington. so before debunking, before getting into the details of the debunking of this anecdote, of this media myth, let's recap real quickly. there is a rebellion going on in cuba. remington is there just situation days. the first account of the exchange between -- the suppose he had exchange between hearst and remington comes more than four years later in 1901. in creelnan's book, which contains no documentation about how he learned about it, the source of this purported exchange. and creelman is the lone person to have come up with this originally. this tale, you furnish the picks and i will furnish the war, lives on despite a nearly complete absence
davis remains. remington makes arrangements to return home, go back to the states, go back to new york on board the passenger steaier the seneca. and upon his return home, the journal begins prominent pucks of remington's sketches of the cuban conflict. they praised these sketches in headlines, saying they are the work of a gifted artist, frederick remington. so before debunking, before getting into the details of the debunking of this anecdote, of this media myth, let's recap real quickly....
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May 10, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 22
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davies journey back to her village is finally over. debbie greets her sister only it's an awkward region yet and. they've lived very different lives since davy left for katmandu. onstage davies family will receive financial support to send her and hourly to school in the village social workers will check on them for the next 3 to 5 years if you look at the level that it is maybe i live where they had to go through as i am well rather . well again gotta have more more she didn't give us here you delay i am and i come up on it on. a presenter there's. all 4 shrines out there who need the money than 110 i. go to coupons because i was so i laugh and everything that are north of a girl was there were a flag of yeah. and this city than boise i mean now and they're going on a day. back in katmandu so bobby's a beautiful each tried like alicia don't want another generation to suffer. salable identity. and this one bottle goes off bonding with oh they need to have her on that but a washout also and they do a good packaging lighted them not on l
davies journey back to her village is finally over. debbie greets her sister only it's an awkward region yet and. they've lived very different lives since davy left for katmandu. onstage davies family will receive financial support to send her and hourly to school in the village social workers will check on them for the next 3 to 5 years if you look at the level that it is maybe i live where they had to go through as i am well rather . well again gotta have more more she didn't give us here you...
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May 9, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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despite everything she's been through davy hasn't lost. as a good is it or are the dream of home i'm strong. on they're going to put that wanted. no i can't imagine how these young children between the age of 3 to 9 or 10 how can they be separated you know how can they live away for so many years so many months. yes lou that's in a few days the children will start the long trip back to their families that's. the poles mountain regions are as beautiful as they are poor opportunities here often. many parents who might feel ages want to bet a lot for their children. often age recruiters pride on that just. families hand over the savings on the promise of an education for their kids in katmandu. but there's a catch. all orphanages might provide some schooling. the children are falsely presented as all phones to attract foreign sponsors and volunteers know that. it's an industry exploited by nepalis but driven by western democracies. we're trained in western countries to think a certain way about developing countries and one of those ways is th
despite everything she's been through davy hasn't lost. as a good is it or are the dream of home i'm strong. on they're going to put that wanted. no i can't imagine how these young children between the age of 3 to 9 or 10 how can they be separated you know how can they live away for so many years so many months. yes lou that's in a few days the children will start the long trip back to their families that's. the poles mountain regions are as beautiful as they are poor opportunities here often....
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 86
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in many ways, he was better for sammy davis than sammy davis was for sinatra. they had something that went on behind closed doors. they were able to metamorphose into great entertainment. >> how do you deal with -- i listen to sirius sinatra on the radio station and sometimes they'll play stuff in vegas and sammy davis jr. is there and the unbelievable condescending way that sinatra treats sammy davis jr. do you deal with that? >> there's 20 minutes in the documentary about that. i think it's an unresolvable issue. to fill you in, the rat pack were two italians, a jew and an african-american who converted to judaism, right, and the son-in-law of the president. and a lot of their humor was very hard hitting. because sammy was not only black, but was the youngest of the group and had -- was physically short, he was picked on a lot. there are all sorts of things. dean martin used to pick him up and say, i want to thank the naacp for giving me this award. oh, cut that out. ha ha ha. the documentary doesn't come down on any side, because whoopi goldberg and billy cr
in many ways, he was better for sammy davis than sammy davis was for sinatra. they had something that went on behind closed doors. they were able to metamorphose into great entertainment. >> how do you deal with -- i listen to sirius sinatra on the radio station and sometimes they'll play stuff in vegas and sammy davis jr. is there and the unbelievable condescending way that sinatra treats sammy davis jr. do you deal with that? >> there's 20 minutes in the documentary about that. i...
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May 7, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 35
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they've lived very different lives since davy left for katmandu and once the davies family will receive financial support to send her and our early to school in the village social workers will check on them for the next 3 to 5 years if you look awesome i have a that it's very i live where they had to go through as i am from rather. well again gotta have more more she didn't give us a little i am i come up on it on. a passenger bus. oh for sure i was out there he had the money than one can i. go to keep warm cause i was the last line of a better north of a go or got over a flag of yeah. this city than boise i mean. back in katmandu so bodies are beautiful each tried like alicia don't want another generation to suffer. terrible identity. bonding with oh they need to know who are not but a washout also and they do a good. work in the good good. family with our are from the. cost of food loans off the. i would say please do not volunteer or fund often ages this is not just a problem in the poll but it's actually a global problem and we know it is up to 8000000 children living in open just a
they've lived very different lives since davy left for katmandu and once the davies family will receive financial support to send her and our early to school in the village social workers will check on them for the next 3 to 5 years if you look awesome i have a that it's very i live where they had to go through as i am from rather. well again gotta have more more she didn't give us a little i am i come up on it on. a passenger bus. oh for sure i was out there he had the money than one can i. go...
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May 12, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 27
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davies journey back to her village is finally over. to be great so psystar only it's an awkward region yet and. they've lived very different lives since debbie left for katmandu and honesty davies family will receive financial support to send her and hourly to school in the village social workers will check on them for the next 3 to 5 years if you look at the level that it is maybe i live where they had to go through as i am well rather. well again gotta have more more she said give us a little a am i come up on it on. a passenger bus. oh for sure i was out there he had the money than one can i. go to coupons cause i was the last line of a back or no less of a go i got there were a flood of yeah. because if they were and their city than boise i mean now and they're going on a day. back in katmandu so bobby's a beautiful each tried like alicia don't want another generation to suffer. terrible i learned they. will often is wrong but it all goes off bonding with oh they need to have on that way to wash up us all and they do it did i'm not
davies journey back to her village is finally over. to be great so psystar only it's an awkward region yet and. they've lived very different lives since debbie left for katmandu and honesty davies family will receive financial support to send her and hourly to school in the village social workers will check on them for the next 3 to 5 years if you look at the level that it is maybe i live where they had to go through as i am well rather. well again gotta have more more she said give us a little...
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455
May 16, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 455
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robert davis was about to be set froo he. >> i'm elated, just in time for the holidays.rt's mother's birthday. >> come on, sandy, pick up. >> sandy, it's steve. set another plate for tonight's dinner. i'm going up to pick robert up. >> oh, my god! >> i think this will be the last time i ever see this prison. >> at last, the final drooive to robert's prison with the news that both had dreamed of for all those years. how are you feeling? >> i'm elated. words cannot describe it. i'm just so happy. if it wasn't for that man fighting for me right there, i wouldn't be out right now. and this is just overwhelming right now. i'm outside of these fences, man. hello? i'm just getting ready to pull out. yeah. it's unreal, mom. as long as this ain't a dream, i'm leaving right now. >> and that very night, robert was together again with his mother, his brother and froo he come. my boy, he's home. a few weeks later, we came to see robert here in his new apartment in charlottesville, virginia. his very own apartment. in which he tells us there is no room for bitterness. there's too much
robert davis was about to be set froo he. >> i'm elated, just in time for the holidays.rt's mother's birthday. >> come on, sandy, pick up. >> sandy, it's steve. set another plate for tonight's dinner. i'm going up to pick robert up. >> oh, my god! >> i think this will be the last time i ever see this prison. >> at last, the final drooive to robert's prison with the news that both had dreamed of for all those years. how are you feeling? >> i'm elated....
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50
May 22, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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lincoln and david davis and some of his allies are riding letters, davis at one point does a tour and meets with weed, other new yorkers, meets with these people, all in part of an effort to make sure they keep their eye on the ball the ball on this case is electing lincoln. and putting aside whatever their personal issues are. you knew this was the outcome, right? i was doing my best to keep the suspense going here. so lincoln wins. it does indeed end up being lincoln and douglas in the north, breckinridge and bell in the south. and breckinridge was the lower south with his argument for late code. l wins the upper software there is less of that commitment to protecting slavery at all costs. and lincoln just stops douglas across the country sort of. he easily beats douglas in the electoral college. lincoln is up with 180 oleksuk volts, douglas is 12 but in fact in a lot of states they ran pretty close. a couple of things to think about in connection with this. one, if douglas, breckinridge and bell had gone together with they have been lincoln? the three of them together got 123 elect
lincoln and david davis and some of his allies are riding letters, davis at one point does a tour and meets with weed, other new yorkers, meets with these people, all in part of an effort to make sure they keep their eye on the ball the ball on this case is electing lincoln. and putting aside whatever their personal issues are. you knew this was the outcome, right? i was doing my best to keep the suspense going here. so lincoln wins. it does indeed end up being lincoln and douglas in the north,...
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96
May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 96
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that is how americans got to know sammy davis, junior. most people do not go to nightclubs, they saw him on tv. he became so familiar and beloved, that is one of the reasons he was able to be a very effective civil rights activist. so without his constant variety show t presence, without that i think it would have been a lot different. >> but daniels says in the documentary that him being embraced by a white performers, in some cases literally, was like a hand reaching out to an entire community. based on knowing that we have that footage to show, we interviewed a number of black critics and professors who grew up during that time, and they said to me some of the most revelatory things we have on camera -- you have no idea if you were an african-american family in detroit, atlanta, or new orleans, you would call each other up on the phone and they, oh my god, sammy is on the eddie cantor show, and everyone in the community would gather around, because it was so rare in the 1950's, because it was so rare to see a black individual on a netw
that is how americans got to know sammy davis, junior. most people do not go to nightclubs, they saw him on tv. he became so familiar and beloved, that is one of the reasons he was able to be a very effective civil rights activist. so without his constant variety show t presence, without that i think it would have been a lot different. >> but daniels says in the documentary that him being embraced by a white performers, in some cases literally, was like a hand reaching out to an entire...
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90
May 20, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 90
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obviously sammy davis idolized sinatra.here's something going on in close stores, they were able to meddle more fires into something that was a big deal in entertainment. >> i listen to a lot of sinatra on the radio, and sometimes i listen to them and the rat pack will be on. the condescending way that sammy davis and dean martin will treat him. >> i think it's in an resolvable issue. just to fill, un rat pack were to italians, a jew and a african america that converted to judaism. the son-in-law of the president was also in the group. a lot of their humor was very hard-hitting. it was because semi was not only black, but also the youngest of the group, and was physically short he was picked up a lot. he was picked up often and said i want to thank the and double acp for giving me this award. the documentary really doesn't come down on any side. mood beautiful goldberg and crystal who assistance oblique were sensitive to that said in the entertainment business with was. what we don't remember, because we don't see them, are
obviously sammy davis idolized sinatra.here's something going on in close stores, they were able to meddle more fires into something that was a big deal in entertainment. >> i listen to a lot of sinatra on the radio, and sometimes i listen to them and the rat pack will be on. the condescending way that sammy davis and dean martin will treat him. >> i think it's in an resolvable issue. just to fill, un rat pack were to italians, a jew and a african america that converted to judaism....
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May 17, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 55
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this is a paperback copy. >> into his fanny davis? >> fanny davis is the mother of bridget davis. a woman who lived here in detroit, who took in the numbers the world according to fanny davis, my mother's life and the numbers, the detroit numbers. >> what are the numbers? >> the numbers preceded the lottery. an informal, i read this in her book, an informal economy. i am not really sure, it had to do with the race track and a few other things. not only african-american people, but people who took in the numbers from the neighborhood and, when the numbers, when the money came in, people got money and they also shared money. it was really quite an event. someone praised her for doing this book because the noble people lived at a time when things were a lot more difficult and that fanny davis had bet on the american dream. she embedded in a way it helped the economy. a wonderful memoir. she talks about this kind of thing not being written down. people don't make history like this. she talked to people. she talked to her relatives. look through her diary that she happened to keep as a
this is a paperback copy. >> into his fanny davis? >> fanny davis is the mother of bridget davis. a woman who lived here in detroit, who took in the numbers the world according to fanny davis, my mother's life and the numbers, the detroit numbers. >> what are the numbers? >> the numbers preceded the lottery. an informal, i read this in her book, an informal economy. i am not really sure, it had to do with the race track and a few other things. not only african-american...
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109
May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 109
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it was the same semi davis junior.mmy davis before i was even 11 i was like who is, that how could that be the same person? that question was always in the back of my mind for four or five decades until i had the chest work on this documentary. how do you recognize style this person's life? you have to find a good question in this person's life. i don't think that you bob cummings from the bob cummings show in the fifties would be a compelling subject, could this lovable guy be a monster to all these people he worked with? you have to find something that you want to wrestle with. then i think it flows naturally out of that. >> i begin with a kind of immersion. you have to immerse yourself in their life. what you start to do a multi with biography, he would work for five and a half days because it was closed on sundays. johnson archives were open for a half day on saturday. every day after he worked, he would go to the hill country, which was not that far from austin and introduce someone from that area. on saturday and
it was the same semi davis junior.mmy davis before i was even 11 i was like who is, that how could that be the same person? that question was always in the back of my mind for four or five decades until i had the chest work on this documentary. how do you recognize style this person's life? you have to find a good question in this person's life. i don't think that you bob cummings from the bob cummings show in the fifties would be a compelling subject, could this lovable guy be a monster to all...
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59
May 22, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 59
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what lincoln, and david davis anddavis some of his allies, ty are writing letters, davis at one times does a tour, and meets we'd, and all as part of an effort, to keep their eye on the y the ball in this case, isis electing lincoln. and putting aside, whatever issa their personal issues are the. you knew this was the outcome right. i was keeping my best to try my bestense g to keep the suspense going. so lincoln winds. it does indeed and being,being lincoln and douglas in the north, and bell and. breckenridge in the south. bell winds the upper south,s of where there is less of that commitment, to protect slavery at all costs. across the , just stops douglas across the country. sort of. counhe easily beats douglas in electoral elect terrell college. las islook but in many states ty ran pretty close. a couple of things to think about,t, thisison one, if douglas, sorry breckenridge and bell had gotten together, would they have beaten tolincoln? lincthis real them together got. electoral votes, and lincoln 108. but would the votes have gone to a lincoln instead of douglas orthey someone
what lincoln, and david davis anddavis some of his allies, ty are writing letters, davis at one times does a tour, and meets we'd, and all as part of an effort, to keep their eye on the y the ball in this case, isis electing lincoln. and putting aside, whatever issa their personal issues are the. you knew this was the outcome right. i was keeping my best to try my bestense g to keep the suspense going. so lincoln winds. it does indeed and being,being lincoln and douglas in the north, and bell...
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34
May 16, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 34
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host: who is danny davis. janet: she was the mother of bridget davis. and she was a woman military detroit took in the numbers. so the world according to fanny davis, my mother's life and the numbers. in detroit numbers. speech of one of the numbers. janet: the lottery. informal. i read this in her book. an informal economy. i'm not really sure about the racetrack maybe and a few other things pretty and there were people, and she said is not only african-american people but they were people who took in the numbers from the neighborhood. and when the lottery numbers, when the money came in, people got in the newark als. i read a while ago that someone praised him for doing this book because it is a noble people who had lived in a time when people were a lot more difficult. in fanny davis had met on the american dream. she bedded in a way that helped the economy. it's a wonderful memoir by bridget davis it was a journalist. these things are written down. so she talked to people, she talked to relatives. she was the youngest in the family. so if such a hum
host: who is danny davis. janet: she was the mother of bridget davis. and she was a woman military detroit took in the numbers. so the world according to fanny davis, my mother's life and the numbers. in detroit numbers. speech of one of the numbers. janet: the lottery. informal. i read this in her book. an informal economy. i'm not really sure about the racetrack maybe and a few other things pretty and there were people, and she said is not only african-american people but they were people who...
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46
May 24, 2020
05/20
by
CSPAN2
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eye 46
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numbers and so it's the world according to fanny davis, my mother's life and the numbers -- detroit numbers. >> what are the numbers. >> the lottery, they preceded the lottery and it was an informal, i read this in her book, an informal economy and i'm not really sure, it had to do with the race track and a few other things, there were people and she said it was not only african-american people but there were people who took in the numbers from the neighborhood and the numbers at the lottery when then money came in, people got money and then they also shared money. it was really quite an event. and i read just a little while ago that someone praised her for doing the books because the noble people who lived at a time when things were a lot more difficult in fanny davis had bet on the american dream, but she bedded in a way that was a wonderful memoir by bridgett davis who is a journalist and she talks about this thing written down, people don't make history of this, so she talked to people, she talked to relatives, she went to her diary that she kept as a young child because she was
numbers and so it's the world according to fanny davis, my mother's life and the numbers -- detroit numbers. >> what are the numbers. >> the lottery, they preceded the lottery and it was an informal, i read this in her book, an informal economy and i'm not really sure, it had to do with the race track and a few other things, there were people and she said it was not only african-american people but there were people who took in the numbers from the neighborhood and the numbers at...
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66
May 22, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 66
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so at the top, davis at the corner. field browning, her undone. there is no furlough we eat in this group. there is not the one guy who stands out for sewerage.lly davis is essentially the manager. he was the judge in the circuit, he is the most respected one. sweat is a close ally of him they are both old wigs. corner is a recent german immigrant. we mentioned in connection withn the wit no nothing party, the number of immigrants come to the u.s. ine the 18 fifties. germans were among them. lincoln in fact, helped to finance a german paper for the republican party. and corner is there to help him with the german delegates andd thethem delegates with areas whe there is a significant german population. ogilvie is the guy who found the rail, or found the guy who found the rail. he's going to beberail around. or will browning, you remember letter lincoln wrote about the woman he thought he might have been engaged to and mightht have marriedth.en e that was browning's wife and browning is a conservative whipp who inin fact was supportingin bates. when
so at the top, davis at the corner. field browning, her undone. there is no furlough we eat in this group. there is not the one guy who stands out for sewerage.lly davis is essentially the manager. he was the judge in the circuit, he is the most respected one. sweat is a close ally of him they are both old wigs. corner is a recent german immigrant. we mentioned in connection withn the wit no nothing party, the number of immigrants come to the u.s. ine the 18 fifties. germans were among them....
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39
May 15, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 39
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what is jefferson davis thinking about this time? why don't you leave the valley and go up to maryland and see what you can do with washington, d.c. so during the campaign season after the nominating conventions are done, a confederate army invades maryland and is outside of washington, d.c. turned back by july 13th. jefferson davis says, okay, i think this is working. we're going to make the northerners happy with lincoln so angry about this war they will vote for mcclelland. general mccrossland leaves the valley, goes to williams burg, asks for huge -- give me all of your gold, all of your greenburgh. they deci they decided to take all of the money and he burns chambersburg down entirely. he walks away, says it is okay. when you start burning cities like the union army has done sometimes, then the voters are going to turn against the guy in the white house. that's the plan. 1854, the casualty list in the summer of 1864, what grant is doing is tearing the nation apart. there's the atlanta campaign. atlanta isn't conquered until sept
what is jefferson davis thinking about this time? why don't you leave the valley and go up to maryland and see what you can do with washington, d.c. so during the campaign season after the nominating conventions are done, a confederate army invades maryland and is outside of washington, d.c. turned back by july 13th. jefferson davis says, okay, i think this is working. we're going to make the northerners happy with lincoln so angry about this war they will vote for mcclelland. general...
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88
May 15, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 88
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jefferson davis says ok this is working. we are going to make those northerners who are happy with lincoln so angry about this war that they will vote for maclean. general mclaughlin, cavalry officer goes to maryland, chambers burke, asks for all the gold, all the green backs. you do not have a ton of people in chambers for. we will take all the money in the bank and send it someplace else just like it was an 1863. he burns chambers burned down. he says it's over. when you start burning cities like the union army has done sometimes, then the voters are going to turn against the guy in the white house. that is the plan. summer of 1864, the casualty list of the wilderness spot sauvignon, what grant is doing, is tearing this nation apart. there is the atlantic campaign, atlanta has not been conquered until september 3rd. we have landing him who is the congressman from the state of ohio, and he is going on the stump and saying you, should go to canada. you should not go to the draft. that is against the law for him to say that.
jefferson davis says ok this is working. we are going to make those northerners who are happy with lincoln so angry about this war that they will vote for maclean. general mclaughlin, cavalry officer goes to maryland, chambers burke, asks for all the gold, all the green backs. you do not have a ton of people in chambers for. we will take all the money in the bank and send it someplace else just like it was an 1863. he burns chambers burned down. he says it's over. when you start burning cities...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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79
May 16, 2020
05/20
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SFGTV
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>> i don't know. >> clerk: miss davis? miss davis? miss davis. >> i'm here. yes, that's fine. >> clerk: okay. so we'll give you a warning when seven minutes comes up, and you can decide what you want to do. >> yeah, i'll give you a seven-minute warning when it comes up. >> okay. so good evening. i hope that everyone's family and friends are healthy during this time. i know that this is the fourth time that the board has heard this case, and the board is conscious of the time spent on this. i'll just introduce myself. my name is brian raffi. i'm a native of san francisco. [inaudible] >> until march 15, when lots of employment ended, this march 15, i trained medical students at ucsf and also led walking through tours celebrating two of our neighborhoods, san francisco and north beach. i say this because i love the city, and i've given back to it. 50 alta is only my second adult apartment. i didn't plan on staying, but i've lived here 34 years. it is my home, and i'd hate to be displaced from it because i cannot afford to remain in san francisco. i know this hea
>> i don't know. >> clerk: miss davis? miss davis? miss davis. >> i'm here. yes, that's fine. >> clerk: okay. so we'll give you a warning when seven minutes comes up, and you can decide what you want to do. >> yeah, i'll give you a seven-minute warning when it comes up. >> okay. so good evening. i hope that everyone's family and friends are healthy during this time. i know that this is the fourth time that the board has heard this case, and the board is...
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59
May 22, 2020
05/20
by
CSPAN3
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eye 59
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what is jefferson davis thinking about this time? why don't you leave the valley and go up to maryland and see what you can do with washington, d.c. so during the campaign season after the nominating conventions are done, a confederate army invades maryland is outside of washington, d.c. he's turned back by july 13th. jefferson davis says, okay, i think this is working. we're going to make those northerners who are happy with lincoln so angry about this war that they will vote for mcclellan. the calvary officer goes to chambe chambersburg and says give me all your green backs. you don't have it because the people decided we're going to take the money and send it some place else. the calvary is here just like it was in 1864 and he burns it down. he lights it up and walks away from it. when you start burning cities, then the voters are going to turn against the guy in the white house. that's the plan. summer of 1684, the casualty lists of the wilderness, what grant is doing, is tearing this nation apart. there is the atlanta campaign.
what is jefferson davis thinking about this time? why don't you leave the valley and go up to maryland and see what you can do with washington, d.c. so during the campaign season after the nominating conventions are done, a confederate army invades maryland is outside of washington, d.c. he's turned back by july 13th. jefferson davis says, okay, i think this is working. we're going to make those northerners who are happy with lincoln so angry about this war that they will vote for mcclellan....
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May 22, 2020
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congressman davis, great to see you again. your name's being dropped in a lot of places. you know, you've been on the food thing and i was talking the other day to jose andres, the chef, about the feed act and he says you're one of the partners in this. and you're pushing the legislation called the meals on wheels for kids act. why are these part of the covid response, if you will, that you're trying to push forward? >> well, hunger in american families is exacerbated during this pandemic, steve. number one, it great to see you again. i appreciate you the opportunity to be on. you didn't tell me i had to follow the surgeon general, i would have dressed up a little better. [laughter] at least you're not in a tie. a lot of people have been wearing ties this morning. >> you're lucky i didn't get the busch lite t-shirt underneath this jacket. in all seriousness we need some ideas that are bipartisan and that's exactly why i worked with the chef jose andreas and my good buddies to introduce the feed act. this is based off of a program that chef andreas used in recovery during
congressman davis, great to see you again. your name's being dropped in a lot of places. you know, you've been on the food thing and i was talking the other day to jose andres, the chef, about the feed act and he says you're one of the partners in this. and you're pushing the legislation called the meals on wheels for kids act. why are these part of the covid response, if you will, that you're trying to push forward? >> well, hunger in american families is exacerbated during this...
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May 4, 2020
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we are joined next by representative davis, 13th district of illinois. he is also the top republican on the house administration committee, which congressman davis will have a key role in in determining the parameters for coming back in the u.s. house. what can we expect? guest: thank you for having me. first, we had a successful vote series to pass the second round of funding for the paycheck protection program. we were able to make sure the capital remains safe, almost every single office in both republican and democrat caucuses are teleworking, so there is virtually zero staff running around the office buildings. just the staff in the capital and those on the floor. if you turn on c-span during those debates, you saw people wearing masks, people in a very orderly fashion coming in and out to vote. they were safe. each voting machine was cleaned. and we can come back to the capitol and do it in a way that is safe for everybody. host: are you frustrated that you are not back this week? guest: it was like ping-pong last week. one day we were told by the
we are joined next by representative davis, 13th district of illinois. he is also the top republican on the house administration committee, which congressman davis will have a key role in in determining the parameters for coming back in the u.s. house. what can we expect? guest: thank you for having me. first, we had a successful vote series to pass the second round of funding for the paycheck protection program. we were able to make sure the capital remains safe, almost every single office in...
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May 30, 2020
05/20
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was onen davis's paragraph. there were 15 different topics that are embodied in those 67 amendments. so one of the first things i had to do was categorize, create a chart listing the topics around the proposalsand down the left side. and if you have read extensively in the decade of the 1850's, the run-up to the war from 1850 to the civil war, these amendments tracked the difficulties this country was trying to deal with. the largest number of articles within these amendments dealt with slavery in the territories. not surprising, because that was the election around which the election of 1860 turned. what do we do with slavery in the territories? are southerners allowed to take their slaves there and have them there as long as they want? should the federal government prohibit slavery in the territories? which was the republican position. remember the republican party did not come into being until 1856 after the kansas-nebraska act in opposition to this core opposition to the expansion of slavery into the territo
was onen davis's paragraph. there were 15 different topics that are embodied in those 67 amendments. so one of the first things i had to do was categorize, create a chart listing the topics around the proposalsand down the left side. and if you have read extensively in the decade of the 1850's, the run-up to the war from 1850 to the civil war, these amendments tracked the difficulties this country was trying to deal with. the largest number of articles within these amendments dealt with slavery...
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May 5, 2020
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so there is nobody in better position to analyze our current moment than mike davis. what we will do in the upcoming hour, mike is going to lead us through ways to see the policies of this pandemic, talk for 30 minutes or so, filling out a series of issues and i will try to collate a bunch of questions you send in and we have more time but i want to be mindful of mike's time after 15 minutes. without further a do, mike davis. >> i have to apologize at the beginning, i have the coronavirus, the one that causes the common cold. i may be coughing through this interview. [cough] >> here we go. >> maybe we should just start very basically with you describing just a little bit this coronavirus, how does it differ from influenza? how do you see this new, what is most folks surprising emergent disease, how do you place this in longer history? >> in the late twentieth century coronavirus mainly entered veterinary medicine because a devastating epidemic particularly among young animals, coronavirus is responsible for a lot of economic damage in the pork industry but also attack
so there is nobody in better position to analyze our current moment than mike davis. what we will do in the upcoming hour, mike is going to lead us through ways to see the policies of this pandemic, talk for 30 minutes or so, filling out a series of issues and i will try to collate a bunch of questions you send in and we have more time but i want to be mindful of mike's time after 15 minutes. without further a do, mike davis. >> i have to apologize at the beginning, i have the...
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May 15, 2020
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jefferson davis was one paragraph. most had subsets. when you add up those subsets, those articles, there are about 350 different topics that are embodied in those 67 amendments. one of the first things i had to do was to sort of categorize. create a charge listing the topics along the top and the proposal was then the left side. if you have read extensively in the decade of the 18 fifties. from the compromise of the 1850 to the civil war, these amendments tracked the difficulties that the country was trying to deal with. the largest -- largest number of articles dealt with slavery in the territories. not surprising. because that was the election around which the election of 1860 turned. it is what do we do with slavery in the territories? our southerners allowed to take their slaves there and have them as long as they want? should the federal government prohibit slavery in the territories? that was the republicans position. the republican party did not come into being until 1856 after the kansas nebraska act. in opposition to its core
jefferson davis was one paragraph. most had subsets. when you add up those subsets, those articles, there are about 350 different topics that are embodied in those 67 amendments. one of the first things i had to do was to sort of categorize. create a charge listing the topics along the top and the proposal was then the left side. if you have read extensively in the decade of the 18 fifties. from the compromise of the 1850 to the civil war, these amendments tracked the difficulties that the...
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May 3, 2020
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davis, who was a student at kent state as she reflected 10 years ago. [video clip] >> i looked out over this scene dozens what seemed like of clusters of people standing in groups, looking down at the ground. seeing in what i was this huge scene was people standing over bodies on the ground. over tople did was go the slope and stage a sit-in. it was like being in a class. people were sitting in rows. what made it more like a class for me was my geology instructor, glenn frank, was pacing back and forth in front --the rows of people and he as he did on the stage in cartwright hall, when i was taking his geology class. but, the difference was this time he was crying, he was pleading with us to leave because he was convinced, and he convinced the students who were staging the sit-in that if we did not leave, the guard would engage in further violence against the students, so we did what he asked us to do and we followed him to the other side of the commons. the people i was sitting with, we made a plan and we decided we would follow glenn frank across the
davis, who was a student at kent state as she reflected 10 years ago. [video clip] >> i looked out over this scene dozens what seemed like of clusters of people standing in groups, looking down at the ground. seeing in what i was this huge scene was people standing over bodies on the ground. over tople did was go the slope and stage a sit-in. it was like being in a class. people were sitting in rows. what made it more like a class for me was my geology instructor, glenn frank, was pacing...
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May 15, 2020
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what is jefferson davis thinking about this time? why don't you leave the valley and go up to maryland and see what you can do with washington, d.c. so during the campaign season after the nominating conventions are done, a confederate army invades maryland and is outside of washington, d.c. he's turned back by july 13th. jefferson davis says, okay, i think this is working. we are going to make those northerners who are happy with lincoln so angry about this war that they will vote for mcclellan. general mcclauselen goes through maryland, through chambersburg, asks forgive me all your gold or all your green backs, you don't have it because the people of chambersburg decided we're going to take all the money and send it somewhere else and he burns chambersburg down entirely. lights it up, walks away from it, says it's over. when you start burning cities like the union army has done sometimes then the voters are going to turn against the guy in the white house. that's the plan. summer of 1864 the casualty lists of the wilderness, what
what is jefferson davis thinking about this time? why don't you leave the valley and go up to maryland and see what you can do with washington, d.c. so during the campaign season after the nominating conventions are done, a confederate army invades maryland and is outside of washington, d.c. he's turned back by july 13th. jefferson davis says, okay, i think this is working. we are going to make those northerners who are happy with lincoln so angry about this war that they will vote for...
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and we've got just a few minutes to go before a bundesliga davi crash in dortmund davis fan opto is outside the stadium to give us an idea of what the mood is like david this is going to be one of the stranger. people have experienced usually you'd be surrounded by heaps more people than this so what's it like that today well well rebecca the. the darby between progress here dortmund and shaka is the biggest rival in german football so but you wouldn't know it by going to the stadium today because there's barely anybody around outside of stewards and policemen now the only atmosphere we've received before the game was when one of the team buses was blasting music outside of its window but just because there isn't a bigger atmosphere at the stadium doesn't mean it doesn't take away from the significance of the event and for more on what this game means for german football here is a report brasier dortmund players will leave this tunnel later today and see exactly this a stadium empty of fans but despite the lack of atmosphere there will be plenty of passion on the pitch as the bundesliga res
and we've got just a few minutes to go before a bundesliga davi crash in dortmund davis fan opto is outside the stadium to give us an idea of what the mood is like david this is going to be one of the stranger. people have experienced usually you'd be surrounded by heaps more people than this so what's it like that today well well rebecca the. the darby between progress here dortmund and shaka is the biggest rival in german football so but you wouldn't know it by going to the stadium today...
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May 25, 2020
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would a jury, even a jury in philadelphia, would a jury have convicted lee or davis? i don't think that could have been predicted very clearly. another complication when lee is indicted for treason is that the federal courts may not cooperate. and the federal courts in this case meaning the chief justice salmon chase. the district courts and circuit courts that included virginia were traditionally part of the chief justice's circuit. that means chase had jurisdiction as a circuit judge over virginia. chase deeply objected to the existence of military tribunals and military arrests. he had made that clear and would make it clear in -- i'm sorry, exparte millgon. chase makeatize clear to general johnson he will not participate in trials in virginia where there are military tribunals still functioning because he regards those as an unconstitutional challenge to the authority of the federal courts. so you've got first of all a constitutional slash legal question in the way and second ely a procedural question being posed by the chief justice of the united states. could an
would a jury, even a jury in philadelphia, would a jury have convicted lee or davis? i don't think that could have been predicted very clearly. another complication when lee is indicted for treason is that the federal courts may not cooperate. and the federal courts in this case meaning the chief justice salmon chase. the district courts and circuit courts that included virginia were traditionally part of the chief justice's circuit. that means chase had jurisdiction as a circuit judge over...
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quiet stadium home to dortmund davis the entire sporting war world has been watching the bonus league his return how successful has it been and what can other leagues learn from today do you think. one terms of crowd control actually works out spectacularly there were some police here in dortmund that were a little worried that the diversity of thought one fans wouldn't add here to the police that they gave to the fans of staying home and watching the game on television but they barely any fans showed up sticking to what the fans seemed said back in march when the game was originally supposed to take place that they would be in intensity games so in terms of people being outside his teams and causing issues of trying to get into the stadium things ran rather smoothly this afternoon and for actual blunders league give us the goods who won well bruce who dortmund have peered to have been taking their coronavirus had as little bit more serious than shaka did because they came out with a 4 nothing victory in this historic darby between these 2 teams holland actually scored the 1st goal of
quiet stadium home to dortmund davis the entire sporting war world has been watching the bonus league his return how successful has it been and what can other leagues learn from today do you think. one terms of crowd control actually works out spectacularly there were some police here in dortmund that were a little worried that the diversity of thought one fans wouldn't add here to the police that they gave to the fans of staying home and watching the game on television but they barely any fans...
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May 15, 2020
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davis was a far better politician than stevens. he never mentions slavery as a reason for secession. there was good quotes on his white supremacy early. alexander stevens was sort of the joe biden -- can i say that -- of the administration. he would say anything. in his speech to the secession convention, he said it's about slavery, white supremacy. that's why we left. we're better for it. our constitution is built on that. jefferson davis was playing it a little more carefully and he was quite surprised -- i think he was rather surprised when england didn't come in on the side of the confederacy, and part of that was the slavery issue. england realized it would abolish slavery in the '30s, i think, throughout the empire. if it was about slavery, they weren't going to get involved. >> also, there was an incredible giving up of slaves that the french and the british did. lost an incredible amount of money earlier. and during the civil war because cotton was no longer being sent to britain and made for the cotton mills. so, what happ
davis was a far better politician than stevens. he never mentions slavery as a reason for secession. there was good quotes on his white supremacy early. alexander stevens was sort of the joe biden -- can i say that -- of the administration. he would say anything. in his speech to the secession convention, he said it's about slavery, white supremacy. that's why we left. we're better for it. our constitution is built on that. jefferson davis was playing it a little more carefully and he was quite...
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May 9, 2020
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host: from laura davis back in 2010. if you are on the campus of kent state university, there is now a museum dedicated to what happened 50 years ago on may 4, 1970, giving you a sense of what life was like 50 years ago and what the campus went through. the book is titled "67 shots: kent state and the end of american innocence" and joining us from his home in virginia is the author of that book, howard means. thank you for being with us. howard: thank you for having me. host: what happened, why did four students die and nine others injured? howard: that's a big question. and the ultimate large sense of this, all of the toxic orders of the 1960's sewed together at can --kent state university that weekend in 1970. it was an age of hate. an age of distrust, there was a generational divide. as i can say as an aside, the museum that laura davis was talking about does a wonderful job of capturing all this. it is a gem of a museum. it has a wonderful walk you can take narrated by julian bond. if you are anywhere near the univer
host: from laura davis back in 2010. if you are on the campus of kent state university, there is now a museum dedicated to what happened 50 years ago on may 4, 1970, giving you a sense of what life was like 50 years ago and what the campus went through. the book is titled "67 shots: kent state and the end of american innocence" and joining us from his home in virginia is the author of that book, howard means. thank you for being with us. howard: thank you for having me. host: what...
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May 5, 2020
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one of the students who witnessed what happened back in 1970 was laura davis. she reflected on what she saw, what she heard in this oral history. >> all of the people that i was friends with that year had been at the demonstration. virtually, all of us had witnessed the shootings take place. we heard that the campus was to be evacuated in three hours. and i had a friend who had a car, which was unusual at that time. hardly anybody had cars. but my friend jeff did. we drove home. i remember seeing a line of hundreds and hundreds of cars trying to get into kent. >> trying to get into kent? >> trying to get into kent because they were filled with parents. my mother was in one of those cars. the news was broadcast on the radio immediately. a lot of students were from out of state but a lot of students were from the immediate area. my mother didn't own a car herself. she was with her friend that day. they jumped in her car and she was trying to get into kent to find out what had happened to me and to pick me up. but they had blockaded the city at that point, at leas
one of the students who witnessed what happened back in 1970 was laura davis. she reflected on what she saw, what she heard in this oral history. >> all of the people that i was friends with that year had been at the demonstration. virtually, all of us had witnessed the shootings take place. we heard that the campus was to be evacuated in three hours. and i had a friend who had a car, which was unusual at that time. hardly anybody had cars. but my friend jeff did. we drove home. i...
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. $75000.00 pounds were expected at the olympia shadi on the butlins davi a stand out crowd but because of the corona pandemic an empty stadium awaited force to find an alternative fans from both sides headed to the pump. it's better than no football surely it is no football is worse was. back in november while the scenes accompanied the 1st ever been to sleep at darby in reunifying but when it looked like attempts to instigate a rivalry where historically the clubs had friendly times opposing fans watch the darby to get the in this power money on one of the 1st meeting early in the season but this time to have a fountain celebrated mob in tottenham impeccable cross was headed home by the dead at the civic chin the 51st minute of each has a fresh lease on life fun day new coach who know. the coach gave me a new chance a new home i decided to make the most of it and enjoy myself for those also. not for going to. this was just lovely day is 2nd game in charge can't take it like a completely different beast thanks in part to his motivation from the sidelines. this coming this is a time whe
. $75000.00 pounds were expected at the olympia shadi on the butlins davi a stand out crowd but because of the corona pandemic an empty stadium awaited force to find an alternative fans from both sides headed to the pump. it's better than no football surely it is no football is worse was. back in november while the scenes accompanied the 1st ever been to sleep at darby in reunifying but when it looked like attempts to instigate a rivalry where historically the clubs had friendly times opposing...
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May 9, 2020
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. >> okay, welcome, welcome everyone to this talk with mike davis, it's exciting to see people joining from all over the country, it's around the world really and it's exciting to have this chance to hear and engage with mike, i am andy and i am with first serve books in tonight the talk with mike is cosponsored and by haymarket books. very soon haymarket with the longtime comrades of independence radical publishers in the united states, were also both publishers of mike davis, very proud publishers of mike and were teaming up to try to do a series of things during this pandemic crisis as part of our political intellectual mission but also because were on lock down, were trying to find new ways for us to share information so it's very exciting for me to be collaborating when my close friends and comrades at haymarket and you might have caught haymarket's excellent teaching last week it's when they started to pioneer this online form, marvelous event, super informative, even inspiring, 15000 of us participated in that, joined in for that great talk and this is aiming to be a series haym
. >> okay, welcome, welcome everyone to this talk with mike davis, it's exciting to see people joining from all over the country, it's around the world really and it's exciting to have this chance to hear and engage with mike, i am andy and i am with first serve books in tonight the talk with mike is cosponsored and by haymarket books. very soon haymarket with the longtime comrades of independence radical publishers in the united states, were also both publishers of mike davis, very proud...
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May 10, 2020
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to misses his jefferson davis -- to miss jefferson davis, he wrote, i think so still. -- to jubalrly the yankee this day worse than i have ever done and my hatred is increasing every day. lee replied it, we shall have to be patient and suffer for a while at least. all controversy will only serve to prolong angry and bitter feelings and postpone the period when reason and charity may resume their sway. the name is on the bottom. the south was listening. harris,nathaniel post-gettysburg, which is why you do not know him for the most part. the mame thing he did -- the most famous thinking did was battery greg outside of petersburg. well worth seeing. thank you, greg. right your great example we are all pursuing and following. all of your men are peacefully trying to build up their shattered fortunes, and the country its peace and prosperity. 1867, january 7, congress looks into acts of impeachment against president johnson. march 2, the federal government passes the reconstruction act. it strips state governments of power and places the south in five military districts. congress declare
to misses his jefferson davis -- to miss jefferson davis, he wrote, i think so still. -- to jubalrly the yankee this day worse than i have ever done and my hatred is increasing every day. lee replied it, we shall have to be patient and suffer for a while at least. all controversy will only serve to prolong angry and bitter feelings and postpone the period when reason and charity may resume their sway. the name is on the bottom. the south was listening. harris,nathaniel post-gettysburg, which is...
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May 2, 2020
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lee and davis would never be tried. lee was still not a citizen because his application had been misplaced. a couple things on that. robert ely never votes again. could you imagine any other revolution that you ever hear about in the world where the ringleaders don't get hung? were worse. you watch braveheart. way tos always a better kill somebody. if you think about it right there, jefferson davis is not hung for war crimes. who is the symbol of the rebellion? robert ely. .- robert e lee he gets to go in peace. it is remarkable in a way, definitely unique. they very well could have created a martyr. don washington and lee -- you want to hear a story? a tangent for you. i didn't know close going to tell this one or not. lee was the admin a trader at washington college, there was , edward joinsb= one it is aessor join, cold winter day. he proceeds to take out a stick of wood. the fire heats up, the woods starts to burn. there is a humongous explosion. the potbelly stove bursts into 1000 fragments. he actually emerged wit
lee and davis would never be tried. lee was still not a citizen because his application had been misplaced. a couple things on that. robert ely never votes again. could you imagine any other revolution that you ever hear about in the world where the ringleaders don't get hung? were worse. you watch braveheart. way tos always a better kill somebody. if you think about it right there, jefferson davis is not hung for war crimes. who is the symbol of the rebellion? robert ely. .- robert e lee he...
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May 10, 2020
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support at the bottom of the screen we will try to get tour to it to the end of the broadcast vector davis hanson the senior fellow here at the hoover institution focus on military history the best-selling author related to 24 books both the national humanities medal if i had that i would have that hanging around my neck 24/7. >> thank you for having me. a lot of us are watching this around the globe cities and suburbs are we know the differences the past couple weeks life is come to us in one - - a standstill you are a fifth-generation farmer right now 15 miles outside of fresno and in this agricultural community. >> there is a sense that life can go on and it will go on by definition with a solitary existence so looking down at the great vineyard or trucks going by a constantly or the east coast with chickens or eggs and beef a sense that agriculture is important to make sure food is delivered to people who are sheltered at home and not as much of a danger because of population density. fresno county is a big county with one.2 million with one and with a little over 100 cases the other r
support at the bottom of the screen we will try to get tour to it to the end of the broadcast vector davis hanson the senior fellow here at the hoover institution focus on military history the best-selling author related to 24 books both the national humanities medal if i had that i would have that hanging around my neck 24/7. >> thank you for having me. a lot of us are watching this around the globe cities and suburbs are we know the differences the past couple weeks life is come to us...