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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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he nominated franklin roosevelt to the court of appeals.was seen to this day and accurately so the second most important federal court in the united states. and then world war ii breaks out, franklin roosevelt says i need you. frankly vincent is here to get off the bench and participate more actively in the war effort. world war i america's involvement when the war ended just as vincent had finished basic training. he felt like he had missed out or world war i. so we wanted to contribute now in his later years in world war ii and a more direct manner. so he left his lifetime appointment with tenure in the pension and everything that comes with it agreed to become a cabinet member for franklin roosevelt hopscotch two different jobs. they stopped holding confirmation hearings for did stop holding votes for vincent. the white house but that nomination shoot down an office of emergency management. nominate for treasury secretary gets the most votes. they all knew him, they had voted on him so many times and said this is a matter of course for u
he nominated franklin roosevelt to the court of appeals.was seen to this day and accurately so the second most important federal court in the united states. and then world war ii breaks out, franklin roosevelt says i need you. frankly vincent is here to get off the bench and participate more actively in the war effort. world war i america's involvement when the war ended just as vincent had finished basic training. he felt like he had missed out or world war i. so we wanted to contribute now in...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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and consider their legacy, their 100 days, how is the presidents first hundred days compared to franklin roosevelt or any other election and the midterm election and the reelection campaign focusing on the voters to pass judgment on the presidential formants along, you have comments and colonists were asking how anything a president does affect their legacy and their place in history. even though we like to do this ranking the presidents is actually really hard to do. so they're assisted in a systematic reasons why it is difficult to try to rank the presidents, difficult to bring their performance in number one, we are not - will have our own opinions and our biases and that will affect how we evaluate any president's performance, the research has shown that ideologies plays a role in acceptance of the presidential race which i am sure does not come as a surprise to you. conservatives will think ronald ragan was a great president and liberals will think of john kennedy's great president of the affect our lives does not stop there, it is also going to impact the criteria we use to determi
and consider their legacy, their 100 days, how is the presidents first hundred days compared to franklin roosevelt or any other election and the midterm election and the reelection campaign focusing on the voters to pass judgment on the presidential formants along, you have comments and colonists were asking how anything a president does affect their legacy and their place in history. even though we like to do this ranking the presidents is actually really hard to do. so they're assisted in a...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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franklin roosevelt number three. you can see the score is pretty quickly drop off after that point sprayed roosevelt for, truman five, kennedy six, jefferson seven, eisenhower eight, and reagan ten for appearance of ronald reagan at the very boundary of greatness. and finally we have rotting house and ivanka conducted a survey in 2014 of 162 members of the american political science association. president and executive politics, that includes me. i participated in this survey. i cannot tell you that much about it unfortunately. i have not been published as far as i can tell where they've had some newspaper stories and the "washington post" and so forth about the research. they e-mailed all of the participants in the study for the final ranking. but i don't really remember what it was like put every member it took me a long time. it took me 45 minutes to an hour. i also never been kind of surprise but some of the decisions i made. for instance i found myself being a lot more positive toward barack obama than i thought
franklin roosevelt number three. you can see the score is pretty quickly drop off after that point sprayed roosevelt for, truman five, kennedy six, jefferson seven, eisenhower eight, and reagan ten for appearance of ronald reagan at the very boundary of greatness. and finally we have rotting house and ivanka conducted a survey in 2014 of 162 members of the american political science association. president and executive politics, that includes me. i participated in this survey. i cannot tell you...
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Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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during these riot, franklin n leslie's illustrated newspaper its august ers in 1st, issue we have had no less than seven artistes on the spot transferring with graphicic ski the chief events. our sketches are all real. not mere imaginary affairs with obscure background which is will do for any scene. persons acquaintedhe with the localities wille attest the accuracy of the sketches. these sketches were not made without risk and often obtained onlyse by great ingenuity. the mob looking intolerantry on such use of pencil and paper. some of the backgrounds of its riot pictures were indeed obscure. and leslies and their illustrat news were always challenging one another about whether their news images were actually derived from direct observation. keep in mind that the artists eye witness sketch was but the first step and industrialized and fracture labor process involving intervening office artists, p editors and superviss and teams of engravers to quickly produce and disseminate pictorial news to the public. but essentially the work of these artists was repertoirial. extentnt drawings,
during these riot, franklin n leslie's illustrated newspaper its august ers in 1st, issue we have had no less than seven artistes on the spot transferring with graphicic ski the chief events. our sketches are all real. not mere imaginary affairs with obscure background which is will do for any scene. persons acquaintedhe with the localities wille attest the accuracy of the sketches. these sketches were not made without risk and often obtained onlyse by great ingenuity. the mob looking...
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Oct 24, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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through their company which is known as franklin and arm field they trafficked roughly 10000 enslaved people in the upper south practically from maryland and virginia to the lower south, particularly louisiana and mississippi. they did it very quickly the company was founded in 1828 and they stop dealing human beings in 1836. in that short period of time franklin arm field transform the domestic trade to something white men might do on short term for extra money into big business that could yield tremendous wealth for its operators. they establish a business model for the slave trade and other traders would follow and build upon for decades. but their impact goes beyond the slave trade business by selling the labors, the body, the asset values of enslaved people they made possible the expansion of the cotton sugar economy and the cotton economy particularly sat at the heart not at the southern economic growth but before the civil war. in the capital that was extracted from the enslaved as they were bought and trafficked and sold and forced into labor, all of that circulated throughout
through their company which is known as franklin and arm field they trafficked roughly 10000 enslaved people in the upper south practically from maryland and virginia to the lower south, particularly louisiana and mississippi. they did it very quickly the company was founded in 1828 and they stop dealing human beings in 1836. in that short period of time franklin arm field transform the domestic trade to something white men might do on short term for extra money into big business that could...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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franklin is over here and franklin actually takes the floor and he goes up past this point no place to the lending trace cannot johnston the johnson speeding to it a day late and a dollar short but he was right mess with the union plan to do in his wonderful back in a strategy is to pull back behind at this river which runs like this. i don't know how many of you have seen this river mike gorman a historian with the park service called these insult to reverse. [laughter] and it is and if you look at it, you're like what's the problem with this, just a couple of streams well, a few little streams surrounded by about a mile wide muck, sticks, tics, and he has high banks on either side and when it rains, it feels rapidly and it turns into a river so it is hard to get men across much less hard to artillery and why gets was a real problem and he wants to get behind best enforcement: to come up through the peninsula away from the protection of its gunboats and the james river and the york river and stretches supply line because he knows he's going to have to get this at some time and is g
franklin is over here and franklin actually takes the floor and he goes up past this point no place to the lending trace cannot johnston the johnson speeding to it a day late and a dollar short but he was right mess with the union plan to do in his wonderful back in a strategy is to pull back behind at this river which runs like this. i don't know how many of you have seen this river mike gorman a historian with the park service called these insult to reverse. [laughter] and it is and if you...
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Oct 5, 2021
10/21
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KRON
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a post office. >> in aretha franklins hometown of detroit now bears her name members of franklin's family as well as both postal elected officials visited the office to celebrate the big name change the u.s. postal service touches all of our lives in so many ways. >> and it's really an american institution. so, sir, if you think. >> that is for sure. the post office is close to a concert amphitheater on the detroit river. that's also named after aretha franklin. she died in 2018 in are home in detroit. she was 76 years old to record several classics during her legendary career, including r e s p e c t think. and you make me feel like a natural woman queen of soul. she was awesome. yes. something awesome out there. >> hey, guys, tonight we are seeing some changes get ready for tomorrow. we'll see a big cool down in the works as clouds begin to roll on in seeing that outside right now more than on the way the next couple days. in fact, whole lot of cloud cover out there. unfortunately not much rain to back it up. temperatures in the 60's and san francisco 60's along the coastline to be bree
a post office. >> in aretha franklins hometown of detroit now bears her name members of franklin's family as well as both postal elected officials visited the office to celebrate the big name change the u.s. postal service touches all of our lives in so many ways. >> and it's really an american institution. so, sir, if you think. >> that is for sure. the post office is close to a concert amphitheater on the detroit river. that's also named after aretha franklin. she died in...
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Oct 1, 2021
10/21
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i challenged him about the whole rosalind franklin credit issue. as response was not pleasant.efinitive. i don't agree with it. but it was an interesting moment in my interviewing career. >> we will leave it to the readers to see. the book is the secret of life, rosalind franklin, james watson, francis crick and the discovery of dna's double helix. always good to see you. ♪ >> the creek fire in central california burned across 385 thousand acres for three months in 2020. the u.s. forest service this summer said the cause of the fire was undetermined. the most probable cause was a lightning strike. in new documentary, valley pbs of fresno explores efforts to fight the fire and the impact on the surrounding community. >> a member getting on the radio operations division microphone, go ahead. we got 200 foot flame lengths. the fire is moving toward the east. we are going to have structure impact within the next hour. and copy. i need every additional resource. >> after burn, the creek fire documentary errors tonight at 7:00 p.m. pacific on valley pbs and streaming across pbs digit
i challenged him about the whole rosalind franklin credit issue. as response was not pleasant.efinitive. i don't agree with it. but it was an interesting moment in my interviewing career. >> we will leave it to the readers to see. the book is the secret of life, rosalind franklin, james watson, francis crick and the discovery of dna's double helix. always good to see you. ♪ >> the creek fire in central california burned across 385 thousand acres for three months in 2020. the u.s....
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Oct 28, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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but we always remind everybody that franklin roosevelt had 319 democrats in the congress at the time, we had 220, that makes a big difference. so again the transformative agenda, the president was knowledgeable, he knows this because he wrote this, he campaigned on this. he spoke to this in the state of the union address and i told him last night had this morning, on the phone last night but today, in front of the colleagues that when i get that state of the union address, we are standing behind him and the vice president of the united states, kamala harris and speaker of the house and me. and people said, how did it feel, and it was exciting but what was really exciting is the speech the president made about women. it not two women but america's laminate and what would happen with this progressive agenda and he was putting forth. and at the same time, moving forward with this, once a century chance to rebuild the infrastructure that is been asked the senate a while back. this has good things and missing things and of course the fact that the reconciliation and you got a call it, let'
but we always remind everybody that franklin roosevelt had 319 democrats in the congress at the time, we had 220, that makes a big difference. so again the transformative agenda, the president was knowledgeable, he knows this because he wrote this, he campaigned on this. he spoke to this in the state of the union address and i told him last night had this morning, on the phone last night but today, in front of the colleagues that when i get that state of the union address, we are standing...
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Oct 13, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN3
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the issue behind this was that they believed that franklin d. roosevelt was ultimately setting the stage for the rise of the anti christ. the diabolical world leader who is going to take power in the end times. they were believed and going to convinced that we are living at the end of history, and that we are living at the end of history. in their minds, and their churches, they were continuously looking for signs that would tell us how close we were to what they described as the rapture, the rise of the anti christ, the second coming of jesus. and ultimately they came to believe that fdr was preparing the u.s. for those events. there is a debate as to whether he was doing it consciously or explicitly, purposely. if that's what he wanted to do. or if he was just not really aware of geopolitical spiritual events behind the decision. now the less, it was clear to them, that roosevelt was a problem. that liberalism was a problem. so why? i will talk a bit about what was happening in the 19 twenties and 1930s. i will be careful with my language. i w
the issue behind this was that they believed that franklin d. roosevelt was ultimately setting the stage for the rise of the anti christ. the diabolical world leader who is going to take power in the end times. they were believed and going to convinced that we are living at the end of history, and that we are living at the end of history. in their minds, and their churches, they were continuously looking for signs that would tell us how close we were to what they described as the rapture, the...
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Oct 13, 2021
10/21
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all this stuff was going on in the background, which takes us to franklin roosevelt. they looked at him and understood him in the context of all the other things going on. there's no doubt his campaign in 1932 got off to an ominous el start. on the first set of ballots at the democratic national convention, roosevelt received 666.es 666 votes.stis when i first read that in the fundamentalist magazine, i thought it was too good to be true. that couldn't really be true. but i went back and looked at the records and sure enough that was absolutely the case.t this already set fundamentalists on edge that believing there was something weird going on here thatt is linking roosevelt to the antichrist. after the election they began to view him in the same light afteh other totalitarian leaders. i often talk to me students about this, that roosevelt has become such a b revered person american history, mostly because ofow world war ii that american don't realize r how much those o hatedou roosevelt in the '30s really truly despised him, just couldn't stand him. i saw this in le
all this stuff was going on in the background, which takes us to franklin roosevelt. they looked at him and understood him in the context of all the other things going on. there's no doubt his campaign in 1932 got off to an ominous el start. on the first set of ballots at the democratic national convention, roosevelt received 666.es 666 votes.stis when i first read that in the fundamentalist magazine, i thought it was too good to be true. that couldn't really be true. but i went back and looked...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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it failed utterly when harding succeeded wilson's ohio governor gains cox and undersecretary franklin roosevelt. when the willkie's left for new york city after nine years in akron not only had firestone's prediction failed that wendell would never amount to much because he was a democrat dwindles political activism local bar association presidency and multiple board services had put them on top of akron's leadership and garnered notice by wall street kingpins. a spectacular future lay ahead, spectacular and holy unanticipated. at age 40 is committed democrat and successful lawyer would preside from new york and atlanta over the nation's second or third largest private utility holding company, commonwealth and southern whose electric power companies of tennessee, alabama georgia mississippi and parts of south carolina served 4.5 million citizens of the mississippi delta with the fared degree of efficiency. that said, willkie's is this success would hardly ever put him between the crosshairs of that t.r.'s presidency but for the new deal deals tennessee valley authority tba -- tv and t
it failed utterly when harding succeeded wilson's ohio governor gains cox and undersecretary franklin roosevelt. when the willkie's left for new york city after nine years in akron not only had firestone's prediction failed that wendell would never amount to much because he was a democrat dwindles political activism local bar association presidency and multiple board services had put them on top of akron's leadership and garnered notice by wall street kingpins. a spectacular future lay ahead,...
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Oct 13, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN3
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and focusing on franklin del nor roosevelt. there's been a sense that when jerry falwell came on the scene late 1970s and organized the moral majority that it was at that point that white evangelicals began to politically mobilize. and that is just wrong. anyone read the literature in the last five to ten years knows that's wrong but this myth continues to perpetuate itself and continues to spread that evangelicals were apolitical until the last couple of generations. but what i'm going to show you today is how the rise of new deal liberalism inspired a new kind of evangelical political activism which organized itself or fomented itself into hate for franklin delano roosevelt. what was the real issue? the real issue behind this is that they believe franklin roosevelt was ultimately setting the stage for the rise of the anti-christ. this diabolical world leader who is going take power in the end times. so they believe, they were convinced that we were living at the end of history and that we are living at the end of history. and
and focusing on franklin del nor roosevelt. there's been a sense that when jerry falwell came on the scene late 1970s and organized the moral majority that it was at that point that white evangelicals began to politically mobilize. and that is just wrong. anyone read the literature in the last five to ten years knows that's wrong but this myth continues to perpetuate itself and continues to spread that evangelicals were apolitical until the last couple of generations. but what i'm going to show...
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Oct 29, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN
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we remind everyone, franklin roosevelt had 319 democrats in the house at the time, we have 220. the president was knowledgeabling her knows chapter and verse because he wrote this. he spoke to this in his state of the union address. i spoke to him last night but i told him today in front of our colleagues, when he gave that state of the union address, we were sitting behind him, vice president of the united states, kamala harris, and the speaker of the house, me, and people said how did it feel, two women. i said that was exciting and historic. but what's really exciting is the speech the president made about women. not about two women but about america's women. and what would happen with this progressive agenda he's putting forth. at the same time we're moving forward with this, a once in a century chance to rebuild infrom have you canture that has -- passed the senate a while back. this has good things and it has missing things. and of course the fact that we have the reconciliation, we don't call it that anymore, let's call it the build back better legislation is essential be
we remind everyone, franklin roosevelt had 319 democrats in the house at the time, we have 220. the president was knowledgeabling her knows chapter and verse because he wrote this. he spoke to this in his state of the union address. i spoke to him last night but i told him today in front of our colleagues, when he gave that state of the union address, we were sitting behind him, vice president of the united states, kamala harris, and the speaker of the house, me, and people said how did it...
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Oct 30, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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by 1932 the election of franklin roosevelt, that number was up to 18.4 million. there were some presidential radio addresses during the 1920's. calvin coolidge actually had a pretty good voice for radio. herbert did speaking on the radio. when we think of presidents and the electronic media we are thinking of franklin d roosevelt and roosevelt is famous for the fire side chats. people think you get them every week. no, no. he gave them on special occasions. there weren't as many fire site chats as people think there were but roosevelt had a very good voice for radio and he understood in the fire side chats that you didn't talk the same way as you did when you were waiting to a large crowd. a lot of times politicians of the era, amazing speech talking into the radio microphone and people would get turned off by that. fdr understood that's not the way that you talk on the radio. he also used radio effectively on certain special occasions and some of his major speeches were broadcast, roosevelt gave acceptance speeches and you may say, yeah, so and the answer is thi
by 1932 the election of franklin roosevelt, that number was up to 18.4 million. there were some presidential radio addresses during the 1920's. calvin coolidge actually had a pretty good voice for radio. herbert did speaking on the radio. when we think of presidents and the electronic media we are thinking of franklin d roosevelt and roosevelt is famous for the fire side chats. people think you get them every week. no, no. he gave them on special occasions. there weren't as many fire site chats...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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he would go the -- there was a franklin roosevelt needed leg braces to stand. he had survived polio and could not walk. he needed to hold the podium just to main tape his position. if he let go, he could fall. i mentioned the 1936 democratic convention. he actually fell and the pages fall out which created a difficult situation for him that he was able to improvise and so that was a bit of a limitation on his ability to justture to and ad yens. he's telling americans what had just happened but he it is a details that americans are just very recently learning so we go ahead in the speech. >> yesterday the 70's government also launched attack against malaya. last night japanese forces attacked hong kong. last night japanese forces attacked guam. last night japanese forces attacked the philippine islands and last night the japanese attacked island and this morning the japanese attacked midway island. japan has undertaken a surprise offensive at standing throughout the pacific area. >> okay. so what we see here is that roosevelt was trying to convey the enormity of
he would go the -- there was a franklin roosevelt needed leg braces to stand. he had survived polio and could not walk. he needed to hold the podium just to main tape his position. if he let go, he could fall. i mentioned the 1936 democratic convention. he actually fell and the pages fall out which created a difficult situation for him that he was able to improvise and so that was a bit of a limitation on his ability to justture to and ad yens. he's telling americans what had just happened but...
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Oct 30, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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eye 96
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by 1932, the election of franklin roosevelt, that number was up to 18.4 million. there were some presidential radio addresses during the 1920s. calvin coolidge actually had a pretty good voice for radio. herbert hoover did some speaking on the radio. but really when we think about presidents and the electronic media, we're thinking about franklin d. roosevelt. and roosevelt is famous for the so-called fireside chats. an or not thing to know though -- an important thing to know about the fireside chats, a lot of people think he did them every week. no. no, no. he did them on essential occasions. there weren't as many fireside chats as people think there were. roosevelt had a really good voice for if radio, and and e understood that with the tireside chat you didn't -- fireside chat you didn't talk the same way as you did when you were to rating to a large -- orating to a large are crowd. people would get turned off way that. fdr understood that's not the way you talk on the radio. he also used radio effectively on certain special occasions. and some of his major sp
by 1932, the election of franklin roosevelt, that number was up to 18.4 million. there were some presidential radio addresses during the 1920s. calvin coolidge actually had a pretty good voice for radio. herbert hoover did some speaking on the radio. but really when we think about presidents and the electronic media, we're thinking about franklin d. roosevelt. and roosevelt is famous for the so-called fireside chats. an or not thing to know though -- an important thing to know about the...
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Oct 17, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN3
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eye 30
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the real issue behind this is they believed franklin roosevelt was ultimately setting the stage for thehe antichrist. diabolical world leader who's going to take power to the ends of times. they were convinced we are living at the end of history. so in their minds and their magazines and on the radio stations they were continuously looking for signs that would tell us how close we were to what the bible describes as the rapture, the armageddon the rise of the antichrist and the second coming of jesus. ultimately they felt fdr was preparing the 9 cents for those events where there is some debate among them whether or not he was doing it consciously and explicitly like was he purposely working for the devil because that's what he wanted to do or was he naÏve just not really aware behind the decisions he was making. roosevelt was a problem so let's talk a little bit might even general goals were growing and power all try to watch my language, i confuse the terms they use for themselves at 20s and 30s they called themselves fundamentalist to the 1940s today they tend to call themselves evan
the real issue behind this is they believed franklin roosevelt was ultimately setting the stage for thehe antichrist. diabolical world leader who's going to take power to the ends of times. they were convinced we are living at the end of history. so in their minds and their magazines and on the radio stations they were continuously looking for signs that would tell us how close we were to what the bible describes as the rapture, the armageddon the rise of the antichrist and the second coming of...
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Oct 4, 2021
10/21
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KTVU
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aretha franklin.wmakers joined family and friends at the late singer for a special name changing ceremony. previously known as the u. s postal service, fox creek station today it officially became the aretha franklin post office building. the u. s postal service touches all of our lives in so many ways. and it's really an american institution. as also aretha franklin. touching the lives of everyone, certainly in detroit and all across our state and our country as the queen of soul. sales and service. the post office is located east of downtown detroit. and it's near a concert amphitheatre, which is also named in honor of the legendary artist. franklin was born in memphis, but grew up in detroit, where she died in 2018 at the age of 76. longer wait times when seconds are critical. look at why more and more calls to 911 are going unanswered. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ hey google, turn up the heat. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i see trees of green ♪ ♪ red roses too ♪ ♪ i see them bloom for me and you ♪ (music) ♪ so i think to myself ♪ ♪ oh
aretha franklin.wmakers joined family and friends at the late singer for a special name changing ceremony. previously known as the u. s postal service, fox creek station today it officially became the aretha franklin post office building. the u. s postal service touches all of our lives in so many ways. and it's really an american institution. as also aretha franklin. touching the lives of everyone, certainly in detroit and all across our state and our country as the queen of soul. sales and...
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Oct 5, 2021
10/21
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KTVU
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eye 47
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as also aretha franklin.y in detroit and all across our state and our country as the queen of soul. the post office is located east of downtown detroit, and it's nearer concert amphitheatre, also named in honor of the legendary artists. franklin was born in memphis, but grew up in detroit, where she died in 2018. at the age of 76. hello again everyone is what's happening tonight in sports. it wasn't just the winningest season and san francisco giants history. it was the winningest in franchise history dating all the way back to new york in 18 83. yesterday's 107th win of the season and the regular season finale was a microcosm of the entire year. it featured. to hit day by buster posey, the only giant on the roster who remains from all three world series titles last decade featured a standout pitching performance by logan web 24 year old and the biggest game of his career. we have not only went seven innings for the win. he also hit the first home run of his career. it's also a chance for giant fans to get ba
as also aretha franklin.y in detroit and all across our state and our country as the queen of soul. the post office is located east of downtown detroit, and it's nearer concert amphitheatre, also named in honor of the legendary artists. franklin was born in memphis, but grew up in detroit, where she died in 2018. at the age of 76. hello again everyone is what's happening tonight in sports. it wasn't just the winningest season and san francisco giants history. it was the winningest in franchise...
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Oct 1, 2021
10/21
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KPIX
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sherry franklin, thank you so much for joining us. and muttville's weekly open house adoption events start next saturday october 9 from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the shelter at 255, alabama street in san francisco. more information on muttville.org. >>> time for a check at the weather with paul heggen. >> we have featured a few of the muttville adoptable dogs at 6:00. they have a hard time rehoming. it will be hot inland as we head through the weekend. a heat dome in control. mild along the coast. warm around the bay, but hot away from the water. and, that heat dome is also going to be trapping some of the wild fire smoke blowing toward us. we will not see a lot of it at ground level, but we will see enough to send us into the moderate category across the board saturday and sunday and monday. then the on shore breeze will strengthen. a big drop in temperatures. for now, beautiful blue skies. no haze, no smoke. temperature ins the 80s . back down to 75 in san francisco after reaching 83 last hour. 90 in santa rosa. a lot of temperatur
sherry franklin, thank you so much for joining us. and muttville's weekly open house adoption events start next saturday october 9 from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the shelter at 255, alabama street in san francisco. more information on muttville.org. >>> time for a check at the weather with paul heggen. >> we have featured a few of the muttville adoptable dogs at 6:00. they have a hard time rehoming. it will be hot inland as we head through the weekend. a heat dome in control....
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Oct 16, 2021
10/21
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says if you're going to secede than were going to secede and go back to that name of the state of franklin. so what do the legislators from national do? they start appropriating money to build roads in west tennessee and east tennessee. but in spite of this granted, the streets were pretty much nonexistent, and you would have some boardwalks for sidewalks and you would have some transportation. but over all, living in the city was really kind of a a dirty e to live because you've got chickens running loose and you've got all manner, you don't have a good sewage system. so living in the city was in some ways kind of unhealthy. so that's why people built these houses, if they had any wealth they would build the houses out like all of these houses out in this area that the donald sends built and travelers rest like the overtones built, glenn levin, the thompson's house, eventually -- that's close to the civil war when that house gets built but they are going to want to stick out as opposed to being in town. a lot of people, men, kept town houses in the city and work in the city but they had a
says if you're going to secede than were going to secede and go back to that name of the state of franklin. so what do the legislators from national do? they start appropriating money to build roads in west tennessee and east tennessee. but in spite of this granted, the streets were pretty much nonexistent, and you would have some boardwalks for sidewalks and you would have some transportation. but over all, living in the city was really kind of a a dirty e to live because you've got chickens...
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37
Oct 17, 2021
10/21
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and one of the most wealthy man in the united states is a man from sumner county named isaac franklin became very wealthy buying slaves in alexandria virginia and initially he he made them walk here and i put them on boats later. they took them around florida to new orleans. he became one of the wealthiest men in the country in the slave business and there's a new book out they have taken all the financial records and thiswould be such tedious work . and really combed through there and dropped the conclusion about isaac franklin's lucrative business and slaves. cotton wasn't just cotton. cotton meant enslaved people. and that's what made the population of tennessee grow so rapidly. let's just move forward really fast to secession and the civil war. east tennessee, mom and pop, no need for cotton. no need for enslaved people they can't raise cotton over there . the weather is notright . the land is not right. it's hardscrabble subsistence farming. west tennessee agricultural abundance. lots and lots of cotton being raised over there and here in middle tennessee we're sort of the penanc
and one of the most wealthy man in the united states is a man from sumner county named isaac franklin became very wealthy buying slaves in alexandria virginia and initially he he made them walk here and i put them on boats later. they took them around florida to new orleans. he became one of the wealthiest men in the country in the slave business and there's a new book out they have taken all the financial records and thiswould be such tedious work . and really combed through there and dropped...
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35
Oct 24, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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in famous copperheads for making them heroes and they began fernando woods and franklin pierce. in one point he has a dream's idea of a future up utopian which black people have been exterminated and jefferson davis as the emperor and copperheads our loyalty. lindsay excited to find himself in the stream and duke and asby pretty early opposed to the civil war, nancy in one stretch teased presently can introduces himself to lincoln as a pre- born democratic tells lincoln, you are hunting and he tells lincoln that he will only if the present follows his demand to revoke the proclamation and disarm african-american soldiers and some black back to their southern enslavers. and by lincoln's own response to these requests, nancy reads, are saying that lincoln be eight, i'm done with you and he announces that his misery and when lincoln went in 1864 election and becomes. [inaudible]. in 1965 and re- surrenders to grant and reporting lincoln's assassination, lincoln or lack has nasty boys regret that the president and his cabinet had nothing to it in 800 before the damage to sudden slav
in famous copperheads for making them heroes and they began fernando woods and franklin pierce. in one point he has a dream's idea of a future up utopian which black people have been exterminated and jefferson davis as the emperor and copperheads our loyalty. lindsay excited to find himself in the stream and duke and asby pretty early opposed to the civil war, nancy in one stretch teased presently can introduces himself to lincoln as a pre- born democratic tells lincoln, you are hunting and he...
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31
Oct 16, 2021
10/21
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franklin roosevelt elected in 1932, inaugurated in '33. during that first four-year term got zero, as you mentioned, paul. he had a supermajority in both the house and the senate, and there was an attack of legislation on the problems of the depression. the volunteerism of the hoover area was replaced by the new deal. and the new deal ran into a supreme court roadblock. in the course of that four-year term, not only did roosevelt have no chance to appoint justices, but the nine who were there struck down major reform relief laws. this is a quick laundry list, the national industrial recovery act, the railroad retirement act, section three of the national recovery act, the frazier-lemke act, the tax component of the agricultural adjustment act, the coal conservation act, the amendments to the bankruptcy law and a state new york minimum wage law that was kind of state-level counterpart progressive effort. so roosevelt was the popular, powerful and democratically-responsive president, and the supreme court was a tremendous obstacle. and so re
franklin roosevelt elected in 1932, inaugurated in '33. during that first four-year term got zero, as you mentioned, paul. he had a supermajority in both the house and the senate, and there was an attack of legislation on the problems of the depression. the volunteerism of the hoover area was replaced by the new deal. and the new deal ran into a supreme court roadblock. in the course of that four-year term, not only did roosevelt have no chance to appoint justices, but the nine who were there...
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and businessman, i mean, this is again the franklin scandals very famous case. so we focus on this. we talk about the epstein story and how compromising politicians are look, epstein was a guy who been, who donated millions of dollars to them a credit party. you know, he was very close with the clintons, obviously. so you know, these are stories that are not new, but it's like you get deeper and deeper into your research is, are connecting dots. and you start to realize just how intricate and he said how small it is that at the top right, the higher you go, as they say this, the fewer people that are in power, the pyramid gets, it gets steeper and steeper. basically as you get to the top of the pyramid, as far as that network of very few individuals, ok, we're ok before i let you go, where can people i see the sound were there? when are they gonna be able to catch it? and what's the best way? yes, so best kept secret is a doc you series. that means we're releasing a week by week for these 4 chapters on video, on demand, as well as iconic dot com. and so really it's, it's there in a
and businessman, i mean, this is again the franklin scandals very famous case. so we focus on this. we talk about the epstein story and how compromising politicians are look, epstein was a guy who been, who donated millions of dollars to them a credit party. you know, he was very close with the clintons, obviously. so you know, these are stories that are not new, but it's like you get deeper and deeper into your research is, are connecting dots. and you start to realize just how intricate and...
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26
Oct 20, 2021
10/21
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BLOOMBERG
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third-quarter sales coming in at a beat as well. 15.97 billion swiss franklin, 15.5 billion swiss frankline we were expected, the diagnosticics businesses coming online, that was one of the key businesses we were looking out for. surely what investors will grab on to, manus, is this raise in 2021 view. nancy: o -- manus: ok let's get to one of the huge banks. we have a very clear narrative, dropping over the first nine months at 3.7 billion versus 6.4 billion. the third-quarter profit rises 29% to 7.3 billion. overall this year are falling by 42 parents. the loans are hitting a record, 438 billion is the top line for them there. so this is one of the big beasts of banking, big exposure to turkey. they have enough provisions in terms of their exposure to a country where the currency is imploding. the total income 17.3 billion versus 18.3 billion last year, the cost of risk falls, cost of risk is 106 basis points versus 176, a strong recovery in terms of demand. so that's the state of play for emirates, just to reiterate, it is all about the fourth quarter, the guidance, 4.9 billion to 5.2 a
third-quarter sales coming in at a beat as well. 15.97 billion swiss franklin, 15.5 billion swiss frankline we were expected, the diagnosticics businesses coming online, that was one of the key businesses we were looking out for. surely what investors will grab on to, manus, is this raise in 2021 view. nancy: o -- manus: ok let's get to one of the huge banks. we have a very clear narrative, dropping over the first nine months at 3.7 billion versus 6.4 billion. the third-quarter profit rises 29%...