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the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. king. traveling booksellers often luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert when you read yes and then reach. out across a sample come and listen listen to what she's reading the new testament in germany after my address commented out at the time of widespread it. receive reading out loud was a common practice. on certs to be just forget only to end in god discuss the. want to feel that i share. like you feel and all this come on i live it's virtue and linked in words like the words of the bible in the language of the germans and it leaves out a you know it's easy. it's just going to end soon and my thought is a sacrifice these are. serious issues. usually stack i wish these are on the books. dismissed. as an angle. luther's translation of the complete bible was published in german in fifteen twenty four an original copy is preserved in the anna amalia library environment. luther's work had a profound impact on the development of the german language the author dedicated to
the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. king. traveling booksellers often luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert when you read yes and then reach. out across a sample come and listen listen to what she's reading the new testament in germany after my address commented out at the time of widespread it. receive reading out loud was a common practice. on certs to be just forget only to end in god discuss the. want to feel that i share. like you feel and all...
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the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. king traveling booksellers offered luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert you read yes but you don't read. either cover a sample come and listen listen to what she is reading the new testament in germany my address commented out at a time of widespread illiteracy reading out loud it was a common practice. once at school we just forget only indian got discussed. aunts feel it i share. like you feel and all this come i that i live it's virtual blake did not spot the words of the bible in the language of the germans. at least i knew you knew that suzy. badly it's going to not seen a jewish plot by a sacrifice these are. absolutely. values or stag i wish these are on the books to consciousness. as i. lose his translation of the complete final was published in german in fifteen twenty four an original copy is preserved in the anna amalia library environment. luther's work had a profound impact on the development of the german language the author dedicated it to his prot
the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. king traveling booksellers offered luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert you read yes but you don't read. either cover a sample come and listen listen to what she is reading the new testament in germany my address commented out at a time of widespread illiteracy reading out loud it was a common practice. once at school we just forget only indian got discussed. aunts feel it i share. like you feel and all this come...
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the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. king travelling booksellers often luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert when you read yes but then read. in a cup a sample come and listen listen to what she was reading the new testament in germany after my address commented out at a time of widespread illiteracy reading out loud it was a common practice. once that soon he does forget only indian got discussed in. aunt field i share. link you feel i and others come and i live its virtual denotes the words of the bible in the language of the germans. one leaves on a union suzi change. is going. to come from my back in south orange. i am seriously. bad. stagg i wish these are on the books. just. like. luther's translation of the complete my mil was published in german in fifteen twenty four an original copy is preserved in the anna amalia library environment. luther's work had a profound impact on the development of the german language the author dedicated it to his protecting the electoral saxony his bible and to
the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. king travelling booksellers often luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert when you read yes but then read. in a cup a sample come and listen listen to what she was reading the new testament in germany after my address commented out at a time of widespread illiteracy reading out loud it was a common practice. once that soon he does forget only indian got discussed in. aunt field i share. link you feel i and others...
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the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. travelling booksellers often luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert when you read yes but then read. i did cut a sample come and listen listen to what she is reading the new testament in germany thought it was coming out at a time of widespread illiteracy reading out loud was a common practice. once that's all we does forget only indian got discussed in. don't feel like i share. let me feel and i'll just come i'll live it's very conflicting lots of words of the bible in the language of the germans i mean at least thirty units using. gives you are going to not see my body sacrifice to these are. absolute. values established these are on the books consciousness. luther's translation of the complete bible was published in german in fifteen twenty four an original copy is preserved in the anna amalia library environment. luther's work had a profound impact on the development of the german language the author dedicated it to his protecting the electoral saxony his bible
the new testament in german a translation by martin luther. travelling booksellers often luther's bible for sale at markets demand was huge. concert when you read yes but then read. i did cut a sample come and listen listen to what she is reading the new testament in germany thought it was coming out at a time of widespread illiteracy reading out loud was a common practice. once that's all we does forget only indian got discussed in. don't feel like i share. let me feel and i'll just come i'll...
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Jun 2, 2018
06/18
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that martin luther king is gone. you can hear if you listen on youtube to the speech from that night -- you can hear gasps from the audience, that people are devastated. he proceeds for the first time in his life to talk about what it is like to lose his own brother and the anger he had had beenkennedy killed. he said our temptation is to want to strike out when something like that happens when what we have to do is just the opposite. we have to come together as people of this audience and as a country at this moment of trauma . what happened that night in indianapolis was quite extraordinary. that in a country, that night of martin luther king's death, when there were race riots in more than 100 cities, when in wasington part of the city burned down that night, there that hadity in america a sizable african-american population that stayed peaceful that night, and the city was -- >> philadelphia. >> indiana. mr. tye: this is great. indianapolis stayed peaceful because bobby kennedy had found the pitch perfect tone. i
that martin luther king is gone. you can hear if you listen on youtube to the speech from that night -- you can hear gasps from the audience, that people are devastated. he proceeds for the first time in his life to talk about what it is like to lose his own brother and the anger he had had beenkennedy killed. he said our temptation is to want to strike out when something like that happens when what we have to do is just the opposite. we have to come together as people of this audience and as a...
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Jun 10, 2018
06/18
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edgar hoover kept going back to bobby kennedy wanting to wiretap martin luther king. the reason he wanted to wire tap him was because there was a fear, and a fear that hoover fans, i think without any convincing evidence, that there were leftists and communists in martin luther king's hierarchy. and at the moment, j. edgar hoover survived through endless attorneys general and presidents, because he always had some dirt on somebody, and he knew exactly the moment to ask what he wanted. he asked repeatedly for the authority to wiretap and in the end, bobby kennedy gave it to him, without defending the decision at all, for a strategic reason. the kennedys were about to propose a major civil rights bill, and the most embarrassing thing to the world for them would have been if a bunch of leftists had turned up in martin luther king's camp. hoover would have used the informatio earss the kennedys and undermine their record on civil rights. the idea that the wiretaps did provide embarrassing information about king, the idea that kennedy wanted that circulated is exactly the
edgar hoover kept going back to bobby kennedy wanting to wiretap martin luther king. the reason he wanted to wire tap him was because there was a fear, and a fear that hoover fans, i think without any convincing evidence, that there were leftists and communists in martin luther king's hierarchy. and at the moment, j. edgar hoover survived through endless attorneys general and presidents, because he always had some dirt on somebody, and he knew exactly the moment to ask what he wanted. he asked...
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Jun 3, 2018
06/18
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martin luther king jr.reness of all men that we must unite in compassion in order to survive. >> the best picture nominees that year were genuinely controversial and influential. movies like "bonnie and clyde," "the graduate," "guess who's coming to dinner," "in the heat of the night," both trying to address racism and race relations. >> virgil, that's a funny name. for a negro man. i heard you come from philadelphia. what did they call you up there? >> they called me mr. tibbs. >> "in the heat of the night," sidney poitier was playing a black man who was strong, who was smart, who was decisive. the movie takes place in the deep south. >> let me understand this. you two came here to question me? >> we were just trying to clarify some of the evidence. was mr. colbert ever in this greenhouse, say last night about midnight? >> this is 1968. you don't have black men hitting white men in movies and getting away with it and living to tell the tale, anyways, and he does. >> there was a time when i could have had y
martin luther king jr.reness of all men that we must unite in compassion in order to survive. >> the best picture nominees that year were genuinely controversial and influential. movies like "bonnie and clyde," "the graduate," "guess who's coming to dinner," "in the heat of the night," both trying to address racism and race relations. >> virgil, that's a funny name. for a negro man. i heard you come from philadelphia. what did they call you up...
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Jun 27, 2018
06/18
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day we see people on the news and social media saying, "why can't these protesters be more like martin luther king? he was civil. that's why he named it the 'civil rights.'" but what you forget is back when martin was marching, people were complaining about him, the same way these people are complaining about protesters right now. >> people of georgia are sick and tired of martin luther king. wherever he's been, he's attempted to stir up strife and disorder and violence. >> the best thing for king to do is to get out of alabama as quickly as he can because he's a menace to the peace of this city. >> martin luther king and his coterie of troublemakers who jump about the south like so many fleas on a hot griddle and cause racial rashes where none have heretofore existed. >> trevor: wow, racists back then were so elegant-- "a coterie, a coterie." ( laughter ) and i like that he sailtz martin luther king created racial tension where none existed. like martin luther king went into the south and went, "you all are black! what!" ( cheers and applause ) i know, i know that those leaders may have been
day we see people on the news and social media saying, "why can't these protesters be more like martin luther king? he was civil. that's why he named it the 'civil rights.'" but what you forget is back when martin was marching, people were complaining about him, the same way these people are complaining about protesters right now. >> people of georgia are sick and tired of martin luther king. wherever he's been, he's attempted to stir up strife and disorder and violence....
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Jun 1, 2018
06/18
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martin luther king a month earlier. kennedy gave the students a call to action. when you look across this country and when you see people's lives held back by discrimination and poverty when you see injustice and inequality, he said you should be the last people to accept things as they are. let kennedy's words echo here today. you should be the last people to accept it. whatever path you've chosen, be it medicine or business engineering or the humanities, whatever drives your passion be the last to accept the notion that the world you inherit cannot be improved. be the last to accept the excuse that says that's just how things are done here. duke graduates, you should be the last people to accept it. and you should be the first to change it. [applause] mr. cook: the education you received gives you few opportunities that you have. you are uniquely qualified and therefore uniquely responsible to build a better way forward. that won't be easy. it will require great courage. but that courage will not only help you live your life to the fullest, it will empower you
martin luther king a month earlier. kennedy gave the students a call to action. when you look across this country and when you see people's lives held back by discrimination and poverty when you see injustice and inequality, he said you should be the last people to accept things as they are. let kennedy's words echo here today. you should be the last people to accept it. whatever path you've chosen, be it medicine or business engineering or the humanities, whatever drives your passion be the...
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Jun 8, 2018
06/18
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martin luther king jr.rst started coming to this house in the late 1950's, early 1960's. as a young minister, that's when he met my parents. he was ministering in montgomery, his first church, dexter. and he would come to selma and to selma university, which is directly across the street from the house, to participate in classes and to give lectures at selma university. so he would come and spend the night here in the early years. during that time you probably had a 30% african-american population. 70% caucasian population here. and there was some racial tension here. selma was a product of the south. it had come through the early part of the century. into the 1920's and 1930's and 1940's under jim crow. the races had gotten to the point where everyone was existing and things were somewhat fragile during that time. my father moved here from indiana, was raised in anderson, indiana. my mother had deep, deep roots here in selma. and in alabama. so she was a native. and they made the decision to make selma the
martin luther king jr.rst started coming to this house in the late 1950's, early 1960's. as a young minister, that's when he met my parents. he was ministering in montgomery, his first church, dexter. and he would come to selma and to selma university, which is directly across the street from the house, to participate in classes and to give lectures at selma university. so he would come and spend the night here in the early years. during that time you probably had a 30% african-american...
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Jun 23, 2018
06/18
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martin luther king did not stop us. i'm here to tell you that nothing that the congress of the united states of america and the policeman and the national guard they can do here in washington that can stop us. we have made up our minds that we are not can let anybody turn us around. [applause] come to washington for our freedom. we have come to washington for just this. -- for justice. we have come to washington for jobs. >> it looks like a nice place. water, light and everything like that. >> i just feel sorry for the young people. the sick youngsters. i did not know much about what was going on, but i know that something is wrong. otherwise, they would not be here. >> it is one way of drawing attention to what has been happening for 100 years and longer. >> i do not think that they should use other people's money. i think they're going about it wrong. >> their up your get something for nothing. >> there is nobody got aced derek drive -- a stake driving them -- a stick driving them. why do not they get -- white don't t
martin luther king did not stop us. i'm here to tell you that nothing that the congress of the united states of america and the policeman and the national guard they can do here in washington that can stop us. we have made up our minds that we are not can let anybody turn us around. [applause] come to washington for our freedom. we have come to washington for just this. -- for justice. we have come to washington for jobs. >> it looks like a nice place. water, light and everything like...
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Jun 1, 2018
06/18
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martin luther king would never violence for violence. he believes that the higher moral purpose would win. he wrote no law of man that square with him. him down.d facteich recognized the that after the holocaust he to't go back to pastor anybody in the country if i of a return in the middle nazi occupation. on a tree days before the end of the war. captors to say there was more to life than just success no means to sustain himself. he thought to himself, if they use galileo against me, they will never use me against someone else. and he told them to go to hell. natan sharansky was ultimately released, and he was on a bridge and the soviet authorities told sharansky, i want you to walk straight. as he walked across the bridge, he could not move in a more crooked line than what he did, his final message of defiance to those who held him captive. but it is not always the big shots. so you work at wells fargo. they tell you to open up a phony account. i am not opening one. what happens? you lose your job? is that the end of it? do you need t
martin luther king would never violence for violence. he believes that the higher moral purpose would win. he wrote no law of man that square with him. him down.d facteich recognized the that after the holocaust he to't go back to pastor anybody in the country if i of a return in the middle nazi occupation. on a tree days before the end of the war. captors to say there was more to life than just success no means to sustain himself. he thought to himself, if they use galileo against me, they...
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Jun 24, 2018
06/18
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reverend martin luther king jr. organized the 1960 84 people's campaign to people's1968 poor campaign. the campaign went on with a six week encampment on the national mall they called resurrections eddie. the national exam of african-american history and culture and the museum of american history opens an exhibit this year to look back 50 years to the poor people's campaign. a panel of civil rights activists and smithsonian museum staff look at it impact and legacy. this is about an hour. >> our pleasure to welcome you to this media event for city of hope. you are in for a wonderful discussion from some brilliant people. my name, because they told me it so, is kinshasha holman conwill, and it is my pleasure to be the deputy director of the national museum of african american history and culture. we are going to get started in a moment. but i want you to know who these lovely young men are up here. they are both named marc. marc morial distinguished , president of the national urban league, and marc steiner, who is a
reverend martin luther king jr. organized the 1960 84 people's campaign to people's1968 poor campaign. the campaign went on with a six week encampment on the national mall they called resurrections eddie. the national exam of african-american history and culture and the museum of american history opens an exhibit this year to look back 50 years to the poor people's campaign. a panel of civil rights activists and smithsonian museum staff look at it impact and legacy. this is about an hour....
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Jun 11, 2018
06/18
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martin luther king jr. was killed, he's the one that calmed the crowd and called us to new hope.was tough. it was tough to go on. >> as both allies and rivals joined together at st. patrick's cathedral for the funeral, the last surviving kennedy brother gave the eulogy. >> i want to express to those who mourn today in this cathedral, around the world. we loved him as a brother, as a father, as a son. >> i knew my dad. when i watch that video of him speaking at my uncle bobby's funeral, his voice cracking. >> those of us who loved him and take him to his rest today pray that what he was to us, what he wished for others will some day come to pass for all the world. >> there's a moment there where he wants to weep and america wants to weep. and yet you're not allowed to. >> as he said many times, in many parts of this nation, to those he touched and who sought to touch him, some men see things as they are and say why, i dream things tha nev wer and say why not. >> america los hope, america lost its innocence again. america lost youth. america lost a passionate leader who cared deepl
martin luther king jr. was killed, he's the one that calmed the crowd and called us to new hope.was tough. it was tough to go on. >> as both allies and rivals joined together at st. patrick's cathedral for the funeral, the last surviving kennedy brother gave the eulogy. >> i want to express to those who mourn today in this cathedral, around the world. we loved him as a brother, as a father, as a son. >> i knew my dad. when i watch that video of him speaking at my uncle bobby's...
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Jun 1, 2018
06/18
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then there was martin luther. martin luther dared to challenge the church. and in fact, it was such a powerful message that the pope and political leaders sent out people to actually capture martin luther. and then there was wilbur will -- william wilberforce. he is the man who worked to not only abolish the slave trade in great britain, but he was also involved in creating a notion of anners, a notion of culture, notion of how we needed to treat one another. i am sure there are people here today who are humanists and have studied this to think about their own lives. for people who get up every day and say they want to build a better world, i am totally sympathetic and in agreement and i honor that. but for me, it won't work. it won't work because the winds and thee and the fads culture knock me off my bearings. i need to have a compass. when i go and hike with my friends, my spouse, and we can't figure out where we are in the woods, i am not particularly interested in their opinion on how we get out.i want to know who is carrying the company's ass. but i al
then there was martin luther. martin luther dared to challenge the church. and in fact, it was such a powerful message that the pope and political leaders sent out people to actually capture martin luther. and then there was wilbur will -- william wilberforce. he is the man who worked to not only abolish the slave trade in great britain, but he was also involved in creating a notion of anners, a notion of culture, notion of how we needed to treat one another. i am sure there are people here...
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Jun 24, 2018
06/18
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we need to get out for martin luther king light. the thing i think our generation did was take what was passed and build on it, or flip the script. i would like to imagine, at this time, if martin luther king came here now, how he would rework his dream, how he would flip the script? any insight you can offer about things we can study about what his perspective was then, or people who may be lifted, or who historians who have perspective, ways we can take that either rework it for the next 50, 1 hundred years, or to flip the script to move us forward. is it even a reality that we can rid of the poor? jesus said the poor you will have with you always. >> because it is a reality, doesn't mean we can't change it. one of the things that history teaches us is there was a time when no one believed you would get rid of slavery. there was a time you never believed that segregation would end. those were realities that were bigger than we may think we are facing today. for me, what history tells us, is that each generation needs to take that
we need to get out for martin luther king light. the thing i think our generation did was take what was passed and build on it, or flip the script. i would like to imagine, at this time, if martin luther king came here now, how he would rework his dream, how he would flip the script? any insight you can offer about things we can study about what his perspective was then, or people who may be lifted, or who historians who have perspective, ways we can take that either rework it for the next 50,...
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Jun 23, 2018
06/18
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honey where he teaches martin luther king studies. he has received robert f kennedy award. tonight michael will discuss book about 35 minutes and joined by rodney who will open the floor, because we are filmed it is important that your questions be asked at the two microphones. and now i'm going to introduce rodney kate strong, law and public policy consulting firm based in atlanta georgia. he's a member to have state bar of georgia and represents public entity and clients and general counsel of city of atlanta bank authority and disparity city and consultant for numerous clients. we are excited to have him this evening as well. please join me in welcoming michael honey to the atlanta history center. [applause] >> is this picking up okay? yeah. so i want to start -- before i start talking about the book, i want to start with memphis. i just came from there, we had four days of celebration and commemoration and recommitment to dream of dr. king but also in the broader sense the movement that he was part of and what it represented in memphis and the book is really all about t
honey where he teaches martin luther king studies. he has received robert f kennedy award. tonight michael will discuss book about 35 minutes and joined by rodney who will open the floor, because we are filmed it is important that your questions be asked at the two microphones. and now i'm going to introduce rodney kate strong, law and public policy consulting firm based in atlanta georgia. he's a member to have state bar of georgia and represents public entity and clients and general counsel...
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Jun 3, 2018
06/18
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there is a version of martin luther king and referred to as refrigerator magnet martin it was reducedto uplifting quotes what he really got from this book was humanizing at and taking the lacquer off of martin luther king and showing him the faults and all. there was a smoker. he didn't sleep well. he played practical drugs. -- practical jokes. it was kind of bringing him back to us and set upon him a point him down off the mountaintop. some people would like to think that king was a saint and he was perfect in every way and idealized human beings but he was a human being. he have some have some of the frailties of a human being and i wanted to paint him as he was. i think it actually enhances it shows him as a farmer impressive person that he did had frailties like anyone. and talked about the fact that he have affairs and people were scandalized less that he have affairs then he was actually talking about them. you have that in your book as well. i interviewed a mistress georgia davis he was a woman of standing in the civil rights movement herself she comes to memphis on the night o
there is a version of martin luther king and referred to as refrigerator magnet martin it was reducedto uplifting quotes what he really got from this book was humanizing at and taking the lacquer off of martin luther king and showing him the faults and all. there was a smoker. he didn't sleep well. he played practical drugs. -- practical jokes. it was kind of bringing him back to us and set upon him a point him down off the mountaintop. some people would like to think that king was a saint and...
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Jun 11, 2018
06/18
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LINKTV
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it is were martin luther king jr.his first meeting within 10 it for president jack kennedy, john f kennedy. so it was there that they met. they, being bobby kennedy and baldwin, met the morning before when baldwin flew out to hickory hill after landing and d.c.nd then got driven out to hickory hill by mr. kennedy's chauffeur to meet with them in the suburbs of d.c. at his home because he was attorney general. they had a pleasant enough meeting step very interested in each other. they expressed interest in each other. the plane for baldwin had been late, so kennedy said as they went off to the city, to go to another meeting, he said, look, i'm going to be in new york. why do you bring some of those people we talked about that black people listen to? he did not want to talk to king or whitney young or any of the established leaders. he wanted to speak to people that had the ears of the people, so to speak. is that he said, look, i'ot som people they listen to, harry belafonte, lena horne, lorraine hansberry. they happen
it is were martin luther king jr.his first meeting within 10 it for president jack kennedy, john f kennedy. so it was there that they met. they, being bobby kennedy and baldwin, met the morning before when baldwin flew out to hickory hill after landing and d.c.nd then got driven out to hickory hill by mr. kennedy's chauffeur to meet with them in the suburbs of d.c. at his home because he was attorney general. they had a pleasant enough meeting step very interested in each other. they expressed...
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Jun 11, 2018
06/18
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his relationship to martin luther king junior, for instance, is quite interesting because after that death that i gin with, after the funeral i begin with the we remember that bobby kennedy spoke in indianapolis bravely about the death of king. he announced to those black people in the hood what had gone on against the advice of his advisers who said it is going to be tough. at are going to the ghetto this particular moment at the death of their foremost figure, it could be really treacherous for you and very careless. he went on anyhow. gril u speech - -- he gave a brilliant speech.
his relationship to martin luther king junior, for instance, is quite interesting because after that death that i gin with, after the funeral i begin with the we remember that bobby kennedy spoke in indianapolis bravely about the death of king. he announced to those black people in the hood what had gone on against the advice of his advisers who said it is going to be tough. at are going to the ghetto this particular moment at the death of their foremost figure, it could be really treacherous...
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Jun 24, 2018
06/18
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martin luther king before his assassination in april 1968. the events were documented by producer edward scheer and a rarely seen 20 minutes film titled "on the case." anne, thank you for being with us. it chronicles the division between black and white america. how did your husband put it together and what do you think the audience will take away after watching? >> and putting it together, he and his colleague spent eight weeks and 27 hours of tape recording andce filming. they went to mississippi. they filmed the buses. and all the way through the resurrection city. use of the audiotape rather than an interview on camera, my husband felt would make people more willing to express what they really felt because they wouldn't be tied to a voice and a face and an individual. it would be anonymous. we've got spectators out here. we've got some so-called white liberals out here. we've got the bloggers was he out here, but it ain't nothing man. what these people do when they go back to the homes, then we find whoever is outside. these are like to s
martin luther king before his assassination in april 1968. the events were documented by producer edward scheer and a rarely seen 20 minutes film titled "on the case." anne, thank you for being with us. it chronicles the division between black and white america. how did your husband put it together and what do you think the audience will take away after watching? >> and putting it together, he and his colleague spent eight weeks and 27 hours of tape recording andce filming. they...
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Jun 25, 2018
06/18
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then, 50 years after the reverend martin luther king jr. led thousands in a poor people's campaign, thousands marched in washington, d.c., saturday to culminate six weeks of actions and thousands of arrests in the new poor people campaign. >> we gather today for a call to action. we gather here declaring it is all for a moral uprising across america. amy: and we will talk about how protest make change with prize-winning documentary filmmaker eugene jarecki. his new film "the king" that takes elvis presley's 1963 rolls royce on a journey across the united states in an attempt to understand what has happened to this country. along the way he speaks with many, including activist vann jones. in 1934.her was born -- bla kid amy: all that and more, coming up. welcome to democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. president trump has announced immigrants should be deported immediately without seeing judges and without due process. in a series of xenophobic tweets, trump wrote -- "we cannot allow all of these people
then, 50 years after the reverend martin luther king jr. led thousands in a poor people's campaign, thousands marched in washington, d.c., saturday to culminate six weeks of actions and thousands of arrests in the new poor people campaign. >> we gather today for a call to action. we gather here declaring it is all for a moral uprising across america. amy: and we will talk about how protest make change with prize-winning documentary filmmaker eugene jarecki. his new film "the...
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our reports surface that kennedy as attorney general had approved wiretaps on dr martin luther king and others. bobby's reputation as a civil rights advocate lay in tatters but he survived his sent back and now focused his efforts on ending the conflict in vietnam. johnson's policies on the war had become increasingly unpopular more and more american supported kennedy's views. on march the sixteenth one thousand nine hundred sixty eight robert f. kennedy announced that he would run for president. i do not think it did my candidate. or the president of the united states. i do not run for the presidency merely to oppose any man. but the whole new policy. that this country is on for. because i have such strong feeling. about what must be done. and i feel that i'm. to do all that i can. see you call it. policies. and in our city. all of these polls that gap. between black and white. because that is now on mistaken belief. that we can change these disasters to bite the policy. only by changing the man we're now making. was bush surely an impossible dream i candidate did not have the backing
our reports surface that kennedy as attorney general had approved wiretaps on dr martin luther king and others. bobby's reputation as a civil rights advocate lay in tatters but he survived his sent back and now focused his efforts on ending the conflict in vietnam. johnson's policies on the war had become increasingly unpopular more and more american supported kennedy's views. on march the sixteenth one thousand nine hundred sixty eight robert f. kennedy announced that he would run for...
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i have some very sad news for all of you and people who love peace all over the world martin luther king was shot and with killed tonight america. for those of you who are. black. and are tempted to feel with be filled with hatred and distrust. of the injustice of such an act. against all white people. i would only say that i can also feel in my own heart the same kind of feeling. i had a member of my family killed. but he was killed by a white man. bobby kennedy now apparent to many americans and not just blacks as their only hug he was an idol to some. dave in a messiah to others. in primary elections that spring kennedy won four states and last fall he was still in a strong position heading into the convention. on the night of dr king's death bobby had confided to an aide that could have been made. he told others that some of it he felt doomed somewhere somehow an assassin would find him. but bobby kennedy did not show fear and did not ask for extra protection. he was campaigning as his own man not as his successor to his slain brother and he was running for the white house said that
i have some very sad news for all of you and people who love peace all over the world martin luther king was shot and with killed tonight america. for those of you who are. black. and are tempted to feel with be filled with hatred and distrust. of the injustice of such an act. against all white people. i would only say that i can also feel in my own heart the same kind of feeling. i had a member of my family killed. but he was killed by a white man. bobby kennedy now apparent to many americans...
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Jun 24, 2018
06/18
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by the death of martin luther king could not stop us. here to tell you that certainly nothing that the congress of the united states of america, and the policemen, and the national guard or any other can stop usre here because we are here in washington and i cannot stop us. we have made up our minds that we are not can let anybody turn us around. [applause] >> we have come to washington for our freedom. >> yeah. >> we have come to washington for for justice. we have come to washington for jobs. >> yeah. >> to tell you the truth it , looks like a nice place. [laughter] we have everything here water, , light and everything like that. so it is all right. >> i just feel sorry for the young people. the sick youngsters. but i don't know much about really what is going on, but i know that something is wrong. somewhere. and otherwise, they would not be here. >> it is one way of drawing attention, you know to what has , been happening for 100 years and more longer than that. >> i do not think that they should use other people's money and come her
by the death of martin luther king could not stop us. here to tell you that certainly nothing that the congress of the united states of america, and the policemen, and the national guard or any other can stop usre here because we are here in washington and i cannot stop us. we have made up our minds that we are not can let anybody turn us around. [applause] >> we have come to washington for our freedom. >> yeah. >> we have come to washington for for justice. we have come to...
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Jun 6, 2018
06/18
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the night martin luther king jr. died. and i was so moved by an article that you wrote, in the "daily beast." i want to read from your incredible column titled "what i saw on rfk's funeral train 50 years ago today." you write, they had all hoped to find a piece of the american dream. and now the train with the dead senator's casket clearly visible in the last slow rolling car seemed like one more fragment of the shattered hopes of that dream. a dream slowly being dismantled, crushed even, by the horrible reality of another assassination. and a daily death toll arriving from halfway around the world on the very day robert kennedy was pronounced dead in los angeles june 6th, 1968. on that day, 106 american soldiers and marines were killed in vietnam. it was time in america's life that seems now like distant sky writing, erased by the winds of past decades. those who have seemed to suffer the most often sacrificed the most. those who seemed to serve and protect the country in great numbers often find that they are among the f
the night martin luther king jr. died. and i was so moved by an article that you wrote, in the "daily beast." i want to read from your incredible column titled "what i saw on rfk's funeral train 50 years ago today." you write, they had all hoped to find a piece of the american dream. and now the train with the dead senator's casket clearly visible in the last slow rolling car seemed like one more fragment of the shattered hopes of that dream. a dream slowly being dismantled,...
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Jun 25, 2018
06/18
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the third factor was martin luther king's four people poor people campaign, which was the sign that not only his opposition to the war which had built up over the years, his famous speech at riverside church a year before, but now king was saying the evils within american injustice and inequality, so the poor people's campaign was just getting started when he was killed. i was curious if any of those issues came within your purview of analyze what was happening to -- of analyzing what was happening to not only philadelphia, but throughout the country, in terms of loss of confidence in terms of the quality of life in the united states affected by the war? >> the only thing i would say about my lai, which comes later, and i don't know the legal technicalities that i recall, richard nixon pardoned or commuted the sentence of lieutenant kelly, which is a pretty good indication that he thought that would be the popular move. here is somebody responsible and convicted of a war crime, but nixon still thought it advantageous in some way, which suggested he had this understanding of where the so
the third factor was martin luther king's four people poor people campaign, which was the sign that not only his opposition to the war which had built up over the years, his famous speech at riverside church a year before, but now king was saying the evils within american injustice and inequality, so the poor people's campaign was just getting started when he was killed. i was curious if any of those issues came within your purview of analyze what was happening to -- of analyzing what was...
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Jun 1, 2018
06/18
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another incident that occurred was when martin luther king was assassinated. there were some minorities, blacks in particular, who wanted to go out and do things and say things that wasn't right. again, i stood up against them and said this isn't the right thing to do. that is when all of this, chow lines, holding up, you know what i am talking about. that occurred. there were some big racial problems in vietnam, because of martin luther king's assassination in 1968. but i was strong enough to where it didn't affect me. >> now, you were repairing, fixing aircraft. >> yes sir. >> did you, did you have any flight duties? did you do a turn as a door gunner or anything like that? >> i was never a crew chief or a door gunner, however i did go out on recovery missions when aircraft were shot down and went down because of maintenance problems. i was part of a maintenance team and we did go out and recover aircraft. >> so you saw a little more of the country. >> yes sir. more than i wanted to see. >> did you form friendships with men from different racial and social b
another incident that occurred was when martin luther king was assassinated. there were some minorities, blacks in particular, who wanted to go out and do things and say things that wasn't right. again, i stood up against them and said this isn't the right thing to do. that is when all of this, chow lines, holding up, you know what i am talking about. that occurred. there were some big racial problems in vietnam, because of martin luther king's assassination in 1968. but i was strong enough to...
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Jun 23, 2018
06/18
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david: when martin luther king made his famous speech.obert: the impact of bringing me and my brother was for us to understand our community stood for something, our community was striving for something, and it was important we were part of it. that is part of the lifelong part of my soul, which is i have to give back and help my community move forward in this wonderful country called america. david: as we have this discussion now, we are in the african american history and culture museum, of which you are one of the largest donors. we are very near to where martin luther king jr. gave his speech. your mother was living in denver at the time, but she grew up in washington. your grandparents, what did they do? robert: my grandfather was the postmaster general for three post offices here in the d.c. area. before that, when he was in high school, he worked in the senate building. he worked in the senate lounge and served coffee, tea, and took hats and coats from various senators as they came in. when president obama was inaugurated, i brough
david: when martin luther king made his famous speech.obert: the impact of bringing me and my brother was for us to understand our community stood for something, our community was striving for something, and it was important we were part of it. that is part of the lifelong part of my soul, which is i have to give back and help my community move forward in this wonderful country called america. david: as we have this discussion now, we are in the african american history and culture museum, of...
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Jun 9, 2018
06/18
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later in his life, as i'm sure you all know, martin luther king joins the poor people's campaign. he was in memphis where he was assassinated to march with the striking sanitation workers there, as we have been reminded by the 50th anniversary just last month. continuing the tradition today of ashley would include job production and wage increases for low-wage workers who are still disproportionately people of color and raising the minimum wage for the same reason. statesar, the united into controversy over monuments of the southern rebellion leaders. ashley hated those that were erected before his death in 1893. in his draft memoir, he spoke viciously about them, claiming they were whitewashing slavery, claiming those monuments should also have a statue of a slave in chains or a slave running away from slave catchers to accompany it. ashley, no monument to although the toledo federal courthouse is now named for him and his grandson who represented toledo in congress. ashley is largely overlooked by constitutional scholars. historians of historians of this era know who actually is
later in his life, as i'm sure you all know, martin luther king joins the poor people's campaign. he was in memphis where he was assassinated to march with the striking sanitation workers there, as we have been reminded by the 50th anniversary just last month. continuing the tradition today of ashley would include job production and wage increases for low-wage workers who are still disproportionately people of color and raising the minimum wage for the same reason. statesar, the united into...