93
93
Aug 7, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
cate: john ferguson. he leased it to the confederacy at the time. brian: how big was it?ate: 147 feet long. brian: how many people served on it? cate: there was a crew of about 10. that included three white officers. they were officers in the sense that they were working on the book but not enlisted in the confederacy. there was a captain and first mate and a deckhand. sorry, and an engineer. there was the enslaved crew. brian: when did robert smalls begin the process of trying to do something about the planter? and where was his family? cate: his family was nearby in charleston, but a lot of slaves did not live together. they did not see each other regularly. but robert started thinking about escaping soon after a new captain came on board the planter. his name was charles. he had two things that made robert smalls' plan possible. he was wearing this widebrimmed straw hat. the third thing that was critical is he often decided to leave the ship in the enslaved crews' hands while they spent time with their families. that was a direct violation of confederate orders, but he
cate: john ferguson. he leased it to the confederacy at the time. brian: how big was it?ate: 147 feet long. brian: how many people served on it? cate: there was a crew of about 10. that included three white officers. they were officers in the sense that they were working on the book but not enlisted in the confederacy. there was a captain and first mate and a deckhand. sorry, and an engineer. there was the enslaved crew. brian: when did robert smalls begin the process of trying to do something...
82
82
Aug 6, 2017
08/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
john, as always, thanks. >>> we explore ferguson three years later.nged since the death of michael brown and the chaos that followed. but also the updates that have happened in a positive way for this city. after this. how your clothes smell can say at lot about you. that's why new downy protect and refresh conditions fibers to lock out odors. so clothing odors don't do the talking for you. lock out odors with new downy protect and refresh. can make anyone slow downt and pull up a seat to the table. that's why she takes the time to season her turkey to perfection, and make stuffing from scratch. so that you can spend time on what really matters. marie callender's. it's time to savor. for over 100 yearsaking like kraft has,al cheese you learn a lot about people's tastes. honey, what do you want for dinner tonight? oh whatever you're making. triple cheddar stuffed sliders. sold! >> announcer: no one loves a road trip like your furry sidekick! so when your "side glass" gets damaged... [dog barks] trust safelite autoglass to fix it fast, and we'll get you
john, as always, thanks. >>> we explore ferguson three years later.nged since the death of michael brown and the chaos that followed. but also the updates that have happened in a positive way for this city. after this. how your clothes smell can say at lot about you. that's why new downy protect and refresh conditions fibers to lock out odors. so clothing odors don't do the talking for you. lock out odors with new downy protect and refresh. can make anyone slow downt and pull up a seat...
31
31
Aug 4, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN3
quote
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 1
john paul stevens. when we talk about the legal legacy of this decision, there are a number of legal cases of which it was cited. here are some of them. u.s. v. cruikshank. ples plesy v. ferguson, brown v. board of education. what should we know about the legacy, the long tail of this? you want to start michael ross about its importance and where the debate is about its importance? >> well, i think paul is perfectly situated to answer that question because in mcdonald there were people advocating the slaughterhouse be overturned and there were people that did it. >> i'm happy to turn it over to
john paul stevens. when we talk about the legal legacy of this decision, there are a number of legal cases of which it was cited. here are some of them. u.s. v. cruikshank. ples plesy v. ferguson, brown v. board of education. what should we know about the legacy, the long tail of this? you want to start michael ross about its importance and where the debate is about its importance? >> well, i think paul is perfectly situated to answer that question because in mcdonald there were people...
75
75
Aug 5, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
the list will be -- david lauter, rick klein, john gizzi, linda feldman, phil douglas, alan ferguson, and sammy snowing to start. with that gentleman, the floor is yours. thank you again for doing this. mayor landrieu: thank you so much and thank all of you for welcoming me and mayor benjamin and mayor giles on behalf of the united states conference of mayors. we come to washington today for a number of different reasons. one -- to highlight the fact the political back-and-forth in washington is not an abstract problem for the mayors of america. each and every one of us govern in real time and reality, not in theory and philosophy. we are compelled every day to get the job done to solve problems, to find an answer. if we can't find an answer, we make one. that is the life we live every day. as we come to washington, d.c., we come with a powerful message. first of all, we are problem solvers. secodnly, we are a bipartisan organization. the presence of mayor giles is an exclaimation point on that, but he is not the only republican mayor. we have a large group of individuals that work wi
the list will be -- david lauter, rick klein, john gizzi, linda feldman, phil douglas, alan ferguson, and sammy snowing to start. with that gentleman, the floor is yours. thank you again for doing this. mayor landrieu: thank you so much and thank all of you for welcoming me and mayor benjamin and mayor giles on behalf of the united states conference of mayors. we come to washington today for a number of different reasons. one -- to highlight the fact the political back-and-forth in washington...
75
75
Aug 10, 2017
08/17
by
CNNW
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
ben ferguson and mark lamont hill and john fredrics and senior political commentator charles blow. be an interesting panel. we learned today the fbi raided one-time trump campaign chairman paul manafort 's virginia home in late july. what's your reaction to that? >> he's a bad guy. that's the bottom line. you look at some of paul manafort's history and his background. you got to really question this. donald trump made two disastrous hires since he started to run for president and has been president. the worst was paul manafort. the second was anthony scaramucci. good thing he saw this and fired the two of them within a short period of time. this guy came into the campaign. >> seven days -- >> he made a bad decision with scaramucci and he fired him. that decision was not made without the president's approval. he made a bad decision on paul manafort. he was a disaster in that campaign and he fired him when -- >> but did he fire him or was it ivanka who wanted him to go? >> at the end of the day the president made the decision to bring him in, he hade the decision to let him go. >> he
ben ferguson and mark lamont hill and john fredrics and senior political commentator charles blow. be an interesting panel. we learned today the fbi raided one-time trump campaign chairman paul manafort 's virginia home in late july. what's your reaction to that? >> he's a bad guy. that's the bottom line. you look at some of paul manafort's history and his background. you got to really question this. donald trump made two disastrous hires since he started to run for president and has been...
119
119
Aug 4, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
ferguson. little wonder that even old john camp bell, old john camp bell, the defeated counsel in slaughter house admitted in his later years that "it was probably best for the country that the case so turned out." so having heard all these wonderful stories, let's consider the wisdom of using narratives such as these to assess supreme court decisions like the slaughter house cases. according to the three narratives, the narrative of public health supports upholding the slaughter house act. public core rings supports invalidating the statute and the mayortive of race cuts in both directions. perhaps this is illustrates why constitutional cases should not be decided to serve even a salutory political narrative. perhaps they should be decided instead according to the original meaning of the text and then let the narrative chips fall where they may. as i said at the start, i'm not tonight going to enter into the debate over whether justice miller's opinion in the slaughter house cases was faithful to the original meaning of the 14th amendment. i ask you instead simply to assume that the florida sena
ferguson. little wonder that even old john camp bell, old john camp bell, the defeated counsel in slaughter house admitted in his later years that "it was probably best for the country that the case so turned out." so having heard all these wonderful stories, let's consider the wisdom of using narratives such as these to assess supreme court decisions like the slaughter house cases. according to the three narratives, the narrative of public health supports upholding the slaughter...
61
61
Aug 28, 2017
08/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
ferguson, missouri three years ago. the bodies of 10 sailors missing in the uss john mccain accident have been recovered there remains --overed. their remains were found inside the ship. says 265 warning letters to companies notifying them of what it alleged to be serious violations of federal rules. tally for thewest first seven months of any year since 2008. that is according to a review of letters posted on the fda's website. global news, 24 hours a day, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in over 120 countries. i'm mark crumpton. this is bloomberg. julia? thank you. coming up, analysts begin to quantify the economic cost of tropical storm harvey. we will take a look at the impacts from auto dealers. from new york, this is bloomberg. ♪ ♪ julia: i'm julie chatterley. scarlet: it is time for our stock of the hour. we are looking at group 1 automotive, a retailer based in houston. it's stock is falling as much as 2.41%. emma chandra is here with more. >> we have been looking at the impact of storm harvey. note tome out with a say it -- today saying auto dealers are likely facing serious financial headwind
ferguson, missouri three years ago. the bodies of 10 sailors missing in the uss john mccain accident have been recovered there remains --overed. their remains were found inside the ship. says 265 warning letters to companies notifying them of what it alleged to be serious violations of federal rules. tally for thewest first seven months of any year since 2008. that is according to a review of letters posted on the fda's website. global news, 24 hours a day, powered by more than 2700 journalists...
139
139
Aug 28, 2017
08/17
by
CNNW
tv
eye 139
favorite 0
quote 0
johns for us at the white house. >> joining me now, cnn political analyst and also amanda carpenter and ben ferguson.pril, i want to start with you. you've been through this before with past presidents. what do you think the trump administration, based on what we've seen the last few days, has learned from past presidents and their skafrt response? >> i don't know if this president has learned from past presidents, because there's quite a difference in what we've seen with this president in these last couple of days with what past presidents would have done. john, i talked to -- before we went on the air -- a former white house press secretary who said to me this president does not still understand the majesty of his office and the use of the bully pulpit. you can't use the bully pulpit in 140 characters. but looking back, there's something to be said for institutional knowledge. you know, i remember when katrina happened. you know, we saw the problems, the slow response at the beginning for katrina. but we also saw a president who continued to roll his sleeves up and to try to correct. he made state
johns for us at the white house. >> joining me now, cnn political analyst and also amanda carpenter and ben ferguson.pril, i want to start with you. you've been through this before with past presidents. what do you think the trump administration, based on what we've seen the last few days, has learned from past presidents and their skafrt response? >> i don't know if this president has learned from past presidents, because there's quite a difference in what we've seen with this...
73
73
Aug 16, 2017
08/17
by
KTVU
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
ferguson as if they are the same. >> it is truly awful. go back to june 11th, 1963. martin luther king lost control of the march. young gangs were attacking whites. the president, john f. kennedy, he said this is not a partisan issue. he said that this is not a sexual issue. this is a moral issue. and just like trump today, he looked at the violence and trump sought both sides fighting. jfk understood the historical context. for trump to try to distance himself from his campaign, he is celebrating this violence. we are still in campaign mode. that is what this is call with donald trump. he is still holding rallies and acting like a campaigner and not like he is running the united states of america. >> we appreciate your perspective. >>> coming to the bay area, looking for justice after his son was killed while chasing down a robbery suspect. >> my son lived and died for his music. >>> warming up over the bay area, today, more to come for your bay area wednesday. i will look at the current conditions and what to expect tomorrow. >>> and what we have learned about more than $1 million in jewelry that was stolen, while a couple watched their son performing. more on tha
ferguson as if they are the same. >> it is truly awful. go back to june 11th, 1963. martin luther king lost control of the march. young gangs were attacking whites. the president, john f. kennedy, he said this is not a partisan issue. he said that this is not a sexual issue. this is a moral issue. and just like trump today, he looked at the violence and trump sought both sides fighting. jfk understood the historical context. for trump to try to distance himself from his campaign, he is...
57
57
Aug 14, 2017
08/17
by
WTXF
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
sentiments as marco rubio, john mccain and various others, when i'm talking about the white privilege they're able to assemble in this manner. when we're talking about ferguson, we had tanks. people were speaking back in their minds of police brutality, white privilege in virginia allows them to assemble in manner they did and we did not have the huge police presence. >> wait a minute. that's where chad and thomas differ, i just think the charlottesville police are inept and the leadership si would have had the full force, what stops this nonsense is the full force of numbers of police, state police and others, ready to move in and squash this stuff is not free speech and it has to be overwhelming to send a message we're not going to take this, ferguson overreacted but this was pity full on part of the police, i'll bet if we got any philadelphia cop, say they were a watching this and were appalled saying they were allowed to go on >> i wonder why they were so slow to react and so swift in ferguson and many other cases when we're looking at this whole aspect of black lives matter that is started with eric garner we're seeing peaceful protests, blacks whites a
sentiments as marco rubio, john mccain and various others, when i'm talking about the white privilege they're able to assemble in this manner. when we're talking about ferguson, we had tanks. people were speaking back in their minds of police brutality, white privilege in virginia allows them to assemble in manner they did and we did not have the huge police presence. >> wait a minute. that's where chad and thomas differ, i just think the charlottesville police are inept and the...
98
98
Aug 4, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
john paul stevens. when we talk about the legal legacy of this decision, there are a number of legal cases of which it was cited. here are some of them. u.s. v. cruikshank. ples plesy v. fergusonown v. board of education. what should we know about the legacy, the long tail of this? you want to start michael ross about its importance and where the debate is about its importance? >> well, i think paul is perfectly situated to answer that question because in mcdonald there were people advocating the slaughterhouse be overturned and there were people that did it. >> i'm happy to turn it over to you. i think that's an impressive list, but in some ways it's the dog that didn't bark. many scholars really believe its the privileges or immunities clause developed by the framers to incorporate all the bill of rights directly against the state governments. so your first amendment right to free speech, which the supreme court didn't get around to protecting state government action until decades and decades later, that was designed to be extended to state governments by the privileges or immunities clause. that's the argument many, many people have made. so instead of having a citation of
john paul stevens. when we talk about the legal legacy of this decision, there are a number of legal cases of which it was cited. here are some of them. u.s. v. cruikshank. ples plesy v. fergusonown v. board of education. what should we know about the legacy, the long tail of this? you want to start michael ross about its importance and where the debate is about its importance? >> well, i think paul is perfectly situated to answer that question because in mcdonald there were people...