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Aug 12, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN
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people got speak. it was not perfect. i people got left behind. we thought we were going to be able to bring our flags and they change the rules. [indiscernible] i don't know whether messages. i think they are confused. i have been listening to the same new sports they have. they got a terrorist attack was going to happen. they thought we were going to hurt people. this rally is not about hurting people who are black or brown or jewish. this rally is about standing up for the rights of white people. people could be on allowed to be unequivocally standing up for their rights without causing hatred and have a conversation with people who are civil rights advocates for other racial groups. we can come to more understanding. a lot of people are having trouble getting on board. people like me are trying to unify. trying to be more modest it. trying to extend a hand in friendship. you are only going to frustrate people. the white identity movement -- [indiscernible] i disavowed neo-nazis. we did not want them at this rally. >> how are white people civil
people got speak. it was not perfect. i people got left behind. we thought we were going to be able to bring our flags and they change the rules. [indiscernible] i don't know whether messages. i think they are confused. i have been listening to the same new sports they have. they got a terrorist attack was going to happen. they thought we were going to hurt people. this rally is not about hurting people who are black or brown or jewish. this rally is about standing up for the rights of white...
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Aug 12, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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people want to survive. people want a job. people just want an opportunity and i'm not saying for people like why should i give my-- but it's going to happen when there's nothing left to eat or nothing left to do? 5 miles down the road it's coming here, so would you rather see someone have an opportunity to be able to help themselves and be better and do better because that's really the majority of people in prison i have met and i will make blanket statement took the majority of people i know that's been affected by the criminal justice system only wanted some-- someone to listen to them to say hey and give them a touch. i hope-- that might not be exactly what, but i think if we look ourselves and say what can i do i always ask the person what you really want to do. how do you feel? unavailable. there are other people in this room available. seriously. it's for everyone, but because usb that question-- because usb that question. >> i would like to get to know you and come to another group and speak to people. we would organiz
people want to survive. people want a job. people just want an opportunity and i'm not saying for people like why should i give my-- but it's going to happen when there's nothing left to eat or nothing left to do? 5 miles down the road it's coming here, so would you rather see someone have an opportunity to be able to help themselves and be better and do better because that's really the majority of people in prison i have met and i will make blanket statement took the majority of people i know...
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Aug 24, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN
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eye 52
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a lot of people on the right. if you are on the left, you are connected to those people on the left. there is a self-selection into that network and maybe the things that you see don't influence you, but they reflect your pre-existing set of beliefs. host: we will go to erie, colorado. cindy, republican. is that right? caller: yes, it is. good morning. i liked what michelle said about the statistics and how the questions are worded, whether it depends on what cut of answer you get. i wonder if you have at all honed into how the news is reflected, how that affects pulling --polling? we know that obama got 80% positive coverage and trump gets 90% negative coverage. how does that play into polling? host: ok. guest: again, we might have a in which people going to whatever source for news they want might be determined by or influenced by their views already. way does the which causal arrow run? do people feel a certain way and then seek out or pay attention that reinforce what they already think. one of the things that
a lot of people on the right. if you are on the left, you are connected to those people on the left. there is a self-selection into that network and maybe the things that you see don't influence you, but they reflect your pre-existing set of beliefs. host: we will go to erie, colorado. cindy, republican. is that right? caller: yes, it is. good morning. i liked what michelle said about the statistics and how the questions are worded, whether it depends on what cut of answer you get. i wonder if...
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Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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reassert piracy of we the people, the idea that government belongs to the people and people are sovereign and government runs away from us or this or that leader runs away, the people have the power to reign it all happen.>> thank you richard for writing. i wish i'd written that one. there was a day when i used to write books, now i write speech but that's the way it is. here's an old favorite of mine, ordinary places . by judith sklar who is the great sensational luminous political philosopher. in the 20th century and she was my professor and my deepest advisor. but she wrote a book that was all based on just a passage in a month essay he wrote an essay about capitalism and said in france, we love to deploy. because it makes us feel better about ourselves because they are able to look down on these people eating people what he said in the logical work that been done on apple's , we record maybe two or 300 people who were killed but he said here in france we participate in religious wars between the catholics and protestants where hundreds of thousands of people are slain routinely and we
reassert piracy of we the people, the idea that government belongs to the people and people are sovereign and government runs away from us or this or that leader runs away, the people have the power to reign it all happen.>> thank you richard for writing. i wish i'd written that one. there was a day when i used to write books, now i write speech but that's the way it is. here's an old favorite of mine, ordinary places . by judith sklar who is the great sensational luminous political...
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Aug 17, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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what you call puts there's always there's always this offense of inferiority i hope people that are people feel and that's what i was talking about earlier on this dominance educational dominance but you know dominance but something that i want to add on to antony read where you are on the end of the show so i'm just going to take it i'm going to say thank you so much that's right at the end of the show i want to say thank you to tom and to out and joining us i'm going to have a little clip of good practices the setting indigenous community this is a competition that was held for the san people this is the sign code of research in rap. the south have a listen. in an exclusive series of documentaries i was born into a very ordinary japanese for. shows five different stories i am just too excited to focus on anything else right now from five different countries and it was true. most importantly was with one journey no one in my family has ever been to mecca this is the joyful location the road to has on al-jazeera. tensions are high little has changed and new village officials are struggling
what you call puts there's always there's always this offense of inferiority i hope people that are people feel and that's what i was talking about earlier on this dominance educational dominance but you know dominance but something that i want to add on to antony read where you are on the end of the show so i'm just going to take it i'm going to say thank you so much that's right at the end of the show i want to say thank you to tom and to out and joining us i'm going to have a little clip of...
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Aug 12, 2018
08/18
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people are people. you know? white people should not have to feel like they are the only racist people, you know, and that blacks do not have racial tendencies. it is all garbage. int: we will hear from jen fort lauderdale, florida. -- jim in fort lauderdale, florida. caller: good morning. i would like to talk about this conversation that black people want to have with white people. number one, that may be true. the press is sitting on the sidelines while all of these calls are going on. but let's look at what a conversation should be. the conversation should be some give and take. so let me give you an example. if black people want to say that slavery was terrible, i might agree. but on the other hand, if a white person says in return, that the first slaves in the united states were actually white indentured servants from europe, and that black people who were freed and transported to liberia actually created 1900sy in liberia in the for the firestone company, that is going to be out of bounds for them. say blac
people are people. you know? white people should not have to feel like they are the only racist people, you know, and that blacks do not have racial tendencies. it is all garbage. int: we will hear from jen fort lauderdale, florida. -- jim in fort lauderdale, florida. caller: good morning. i would like to talk about this conversation that black people want to have with white people. number one, that may be true. the press is sitting on the sidelines while all of these calls are going on. but...
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Aug 14, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN
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eye 53
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sick people. healthy people are going to be -- more attractive. if you are trying to herd everyone into the same type of plans, your to make sure everyone gets the same type of health insurance and prohibit any type of variation in any type of competition. unstable.ently at the end of the day, what happened is because we impose regulatory tax on people who are relatively healthy and have pre-existing conditions and witty get sick before they purchase insurance, you are essentially imposing an enormous to the relative health-care senators of most individuals and most individuals are relatively healthy. peopleo much for healthy who tend to be younger and younger people have lower incomes. given the affordable care act's architects had to create enormous exemptions for this arrangement because they admitted it was protest with unfair, so the executive 26-year-old from the risk pool, and classes of low income people from the individual mandate even before it was revealed and most people who really wou
sick people. healthy people are going to be -- more attractive. if you are trying to herd everyone into the same type of plans, your to make sure everyone gets the same type of health insurance and prohibit any type of variation in any type of competition. unstable.ently at the end of the day, what happened is because we impose regulatory tax on people who are relatively healthy and have pre-existing conditions and witty get sick before they purchase insurance, you are essentially imposing an...
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Aug 5, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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maybe those people are the people who delight in sitting at a counter every day for the chance to do the one phone call. >> she had this idea that we could solve the proble problem e job distribution finding jobs nobody else would want. children like to play, let them clean the toilets and that kind of thing. [laughter] that's kind of the spirit of putting it. but yes, i suppose. the question though is why do you need to do that at all, if you can make interesting games for them to play and this is one of the arguments i can do at the end of the book if we were to allocate jobs or is the way that anybody given the choice of doing whatever they want would end up sayinwithinthat saying it another box and even if they are not meticulously annoying people who want to do precise things. >> you talk about the work ethic and how it makes them sit in a room and watch tv all day. >> the theory and the economics of the grounding philosophy is to be trained in economics for anything. what economics teaches you is we are all selfish bastards and we are all lazy. basically we are all trying to ma
maybe those people are the people who delight in sitting at a counter every day for the chance to do the one phone call. >> she had this idea that we could solve the proble problem e job distribution finding jobs nobody else would want. children like to play, let them clean the toilets and that kind of thing. [laughter] that's kind of the spirit of putting it. but yes, i suppose. the question though is why do you need to do that at all, if you can make interesting games for them to play...
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137
Aug 3, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN
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people that -- things that people thought -- the greatest luxury people had was a flush toilet. the really rich guy had air-conditioning. everyone has air-conditioning. nobody had a microwave or cell phone. the person who is poor today in the united states has a microwave, car two tv's. that is a demonstration of how successful capitalism is. socialism is people living in abject poverty. wealth is not created by socialism. suffering is created by socialism. the best way to fight back against all of these myths, with regard to democratic socialism is a moral argument. it is not just the capitalism that is more affected. it is a fairer, better more moral way of life. capitalism is based on a few concepts based in judeo-christian. religion image, are made in god's we on the fruits of our labors. these are not self-evident. you have to make those assumptions to get to a culture driven by free market. i have the ability to trade my labor for your labor. that an individual trumps the community. these are things inherent in the history of western civilization and have been rejected by
people that -- things that people thought -- the greatest luxury people had was a flush toilet. the really rich guy had air-conditioning. everyone has air-conditioning. nobody had a microwave or cell phone. the person who is poor today in the united states has a microwave, car two tv's. that is a demonstration of how successful capitalism is. socialism is people living in abject poverty. wealth is not created by socialism. suffering is created by socialism. the best way to fight back against...
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Aug 3, 2018
08/18
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eye 79
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[applause] natural gas and nuclear kill people. death kill black people. -- kill black people. we have to deal with that. renewable energy cannot extract from the global south. we cannot just talk about solar panels. we have to talk about who is being extracted from to get those together. climate solutions have to be rooted in justice. this is the fate of our planet. let's say that together. -- save it together. thank you. [applause] >> hi, carl, it is me, dad. by the time you're watching this you will have grown up to be just like courageous you are now as a little boy. but i don't know how much longer i will be around for you. i was diagnosed with als today. which is a deadly debilitating disease. today, my muscles are turning into jell-o and my body is not what it used to be. after i was diagnosed congress passed a tax bill that put my health care at risk. the coming years will be very hard for me, for you, for mom. i am going to need medicine. i'm going to need a ventilator. and i'm going to need medicare to pay for my health care. >> the aarp authorized -- >> all to give t
[applause] natural gas and nuclear kill people. death kill black people. -- kill black people. we have to deal with that. renewable energy cannot extract from the global south. we cannot just talk about solar panels. we have to talk about who is being extracted from to get those together. climate solutions have to be rooted in justice. this is the fate of our planet. let's say that together. -- save it together. thank you. [applause] >> hi, carl, it is me, dad. by the time you're watching...
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Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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white people will perceive danger simply by the presence of black people. we cannot trust our perceptions when it comes to race and crime. but regardless of whether the neighborhood is actually more or less dangerous than other neighborhoods, what is salient about this exchange is how it functions racially and what that means for the white people engaged in it. for my friend and me, this conversation did not increase our awareness of the danger of some specific neighborhood. rather, the exchange reinforced our fundamental beliefs about black people. toni morrison uses the term race talk to capture, quote, the explicit insertion into everyday life of racial signs and symbols that have no meaning other than positioning african-americans into the lowest level of the racial hierarchy. casual race talk is a key component of white racial framing because it accomplishes the interconnected goals of elevating whites while demeaning people of color. race talk always implies a racial us and them. so this sets us up to say some pretty superficial things. so i do discou
white people will perceive danger simply by the presence of black people. we cannot trust our perceptions when it comes to race and crime. but regardless of whether the neighborhood is actually more or less dangerous than other neighborhoods, what is salient about this exchange is how it functions racially and what that means for the white people engaged in it. for my friend and me, this conversation did not increase our awareness of the danger of some specific neighborhood. rather, the...
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Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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BBCNEWS
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three people were injured.nfrom birmingham, salih khater, has been charged. he's been charged on two counts. firstly, attempting to murder members of the public. secondly, attempting to murder police officers. police say they are treating this case as terrorism—related on the basis of the methodology, they say, of the iconic location, and the fact that civilians, members of the public and police officers were targeted. salih khater is due to appear at westminster magistrates' court on monday. jon donnison reporting. downing street has confirmed that a series of briefing papers will be released this week, informing people and businesses what to do in the event that britain leaves the eu with no agreement. brexit secretary dominic raab will travel to brussels on tuesday to meet with eu chief negotiator michel barnier, to "pick up the pace and intensity of discussions" before giving a speech outlining the government's "no deal" plans. earlier, our political correspondent susanna mendonca gave us more detail on the
three people were injured.nfrom birmingham, salih khater, has been charged. he's been charged on two counts. firstly, attempting to murder members of the public. secondly, attempting to murder police officers. police say they are treating this case as terrorism—related on the basis of the methodology, they say, of the iconic location, and the fact that civilians, members of the public and police officers were targeted. salih khater is due to appear at westminster magistrates' court on monday....
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60
Aug 21, 2018
08/18
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BBCNEWS
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eye 60
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the people remember that and then when you come up with these highfalutin analyses of what people aroundld are thinking, we wonder whether we can take it seriously. you can. we're talking about very different things, very different questions. i'm not talking about razor thin differences between an outcome in particular states in the us, i'm talking about big differences. to give you examples, we think that immigration is twice the level it actually is. it is not a percentage point here or there, it is, taking the uk's example, it is about 13% of the population, our immigrants, whereas the average guess is around 25%. in france, the actual population of muslims, the proportion that make up of the population in france is around 7% or 8% but the guess in france is around 30%. and think it's going to be 40% in the next two or three years. so there's a big difference. is there any evidence that the mismatch between perception and reality, is either increasing or decreasing? i began this particular conversation by suggesting that humankind has access to more information today than ever before.
the people remember that and then when you come up with these highfalutin analyses of what people aroundld are thinking, we wonder whether we can take it seriously. you can. we're talking about very different things, very different questions. i'm not talking about razor thin differences between an outcome in particular states in the us, i'm talking about big differences. to give you examples, we think that immigration is twice the level it actually is. it is not a percentage point here or...
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Aug 21, 2018
08/18
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BBCNEWS
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the british people, put it back to the british people, put it back to the british people for a finallution is surely going to be nonsensical. because the tribes, the identical politics, is far beyond that sort of resolution. yes, absolutely, but it is not... i would agree with that, but it is also come andi agree with that, but it is also come and i would definitely agree the cultural factors a re and i would definitely agree the cultural factors are so important to people in this. but it is also about the future, as well. and the trouble is, there are no facts about the future in these types ofjudgements. you cannot say that you are right or wrong about what is going to happen asa wrong about what is going to happen as a result of this. so it is not just about these camps that are com pletely just about these camps that are completely not talking to each other, and never going to move. we have already seen some elements of movements within them, and people are not entirely set in one identity. and in fact, what we tried to cover in the book is actually, if you are looking for a time
the british people, put it back to the british people, put it back to the british people for a finallution is surely going to be nonsensical. because the tribes, the identical politics, is far beyond that sort of resolution. yes, absolutely, but it is not... i would agree with that, but it is also come andi agree with that, but it is also come and i would definitely agree the cultural factors a re and i would definitely agree the cultural factors are so important to people in this. but it is...
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Aug 18, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 81
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in these people we celebrate. it's about people of african dissent. that's what gets me started in the morning. i like good books. but there are so many publishers that have capabilities beyond ours. experiences beyond ours that i regularly send writers to because talent equates that. my mission is different. >> what is the process of finding a writer like mrs. houston whose in the original publisher? >> when people think so publisher they think it's something new. it's not. people like whitman and other folks published books on their own. mrs. houston was following in that tradition. she came from a family, her brother was a newspaperman and she was a newspaper woman and they work together to establish a newspaper. in this case, she is publishing her work. were talking about 1926. you won't find histories on black people in the ancient world. very much at all during that time. that's because of the universal denial of black history going beyond and not a civilized history going in lake west africa. you talk about them not having a history. the market
in these people we celebrate. it's about people of african dissent. that's what gets me started in the morning. i like good books. but there are so many publishers that have capabilities beyond ours. experiences beyond ours that i regularly send writers to because talent equates that. my mission is different. >> what is the process of finding a writer like mrs. houston whose in the original publisher? >> when people think so publisher they think it's something new. it's not. people...
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Aug 11, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 39
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are people who don't interact with people around the country. the people who live around immigrants as we do in the neighborhood for example, they are not hostile to non-americans. there is this enormous value here and part of the nativism is understandable. it may be a little correct that foreign workers are taking their jobs or the good thing their wages. but that makes them anxious and they do know accurately that these foreigners are making money and google is making money off of them so they feel the idea behind this is to try to make sure that the wealth flows more directly to ordinary people the foreign workers would make a lot of money relative to their home countries. ordinary americans are hostile to immigration and they would see some of that benefit. would this result in a greater contempt for the foreign workers in the neighborhood or what it is we suggest lead to greater empathy and understanding? it's hard to know. you could be pessimistic about what would happen and i'm an optimist. >> i'm an optimist too. i'm skeptical of this.
are people who don't interact with people around the country. the people who live around immigrants as we do in the neighborhood for example, they are not hostile to non-americans. there is this enormous value here and part of the nativism is understandable. it may be a little correct that foreign workers are taking their jobs or the good thing their wages. but that makes them anxious and they do know accurately that these foreigners are making money and google is making money off of them so...
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Aug 21, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN3
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other people. only half believe it is likely that someone is likely that the air force is withholding evidence of life on other print -- planets. when we talk about this more we will talk about the racial differences in conspiracy theories. yes? that was a different survey, it was in a peer. the number who believe that christ will return before 2050, this was asked in 2010, the question said, in the next 40 years. so the reason it is structured that way is to separate those people, if you are in southern baptist church of the nazarene, faiths that have a strong component of second coming of christ, like i was raised in, there's a large number of people who said that will eventually happen and of course they would say yes in my lifetime. i do -- i think of my life forward with the expectation of christ appearing in the next 40 years. my estate planning might be a little different. the numbers 41%. that was a -- only 15 reese -- 1500 research studies. -- participants. 36% -- 75% believe the governmen
other people. only half believe it is likely that someone is likely that the air force is withholding evidence of life on other print -- planets. when we talk about this more we will talk about the racial differences in conspiracy theories. yes? that was a different survey, it was in a peer. the number who believe that christ will return before 2050, this was asked in 2010, the question said, in the next 40 years. so the reason it is structured that way is to separate those people, if you are...
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96
Aug 2, 2018
08/18
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eye 96
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people of color are now 38% of our population and will soon need a majority of people. as a group, we are growing fast. we are the most progressive voters and most reliable democrats. [applause] been tough the last two years to convince the political toategist and party leaders change their assumptions and biases about what it takes to win elections. it was difficult to get resources for voter turnout for communities of color. for example, as a reminder, in 2016 democrats spent 75% of chests going after white moderate and conservative voters. we know how that turned out. [applause] now trump is president. we lost both houses. women voteded white for trump. of all white women voted for trump. so the old playbook that led to that is dead. [applause] the new storyre begins, out of the rubble of th practices, new and beautiful possibilities are emerging, so let me tell you a story. last summer, i traveled to southern georgia, albany, to witness stacey abrams declare her candidacy for governor. [applause] knew stacey as one of the most brilliant strategists of the new americ
people of color are now 38% of our population and will soon need a majority of people. as a group, we are growing fast. we are the most progressive voters and most reliable democrats. [applause] been tough the last two years to convince the political toategist and party leaders change their assumptions and biases about what it takes to win elections. it was difficult to get resources for voter turnout for communities of color. for example, as a reminder, in 2016 democrats spent 75% of chests...
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Aug 17, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 32
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the people that designed themes will be accountable to other people. if we address both of those questions and find answers to ensure accountability can we ensure the confidence and where the future is going but as somebody that deals with the questions that arise out of this, those put together are not sufficient and we need to talk about the hippocratic oath developers would be. what does it take to ensure that they will do no harm and to train a new generation of people so they can work with that kind of commitment in principle in mind. one should never think that it's a question to be thought about the people that are asked to work at a tech companies because given where it is going and the kind of approach we are taking it is ensuring that anybody can build and ai solution for the building blocks and the like so that other people, governments, companies, universities, individuals can take them and create their own solutions. it's a wonderful thing but it means that the ethics are not just for a few people they are for almost every part of society.
the people that designed themes will be accountable to other people. if we address both of those questions and find answers to ensure accountability can we ensure the confidence and where the future is going but as somebody that deals with the questions that arise out of this, those put together are not sufficient and we need to talk about the hippocratic oath developers would be. what does it take to ensure that they will do no harm and to train a new generation of people so they can work with...
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54
Aug 11, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 54
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od to this are the people who don't interact with the people from other countries. the people who live around immigrant is, as we do in this neighborhood, for example, they don't -- they're not hostile to nonamericans. so the idea here was, there's this enorm mouse value here, and part of the nativism is understandable, people think, probably not contributely -- maybe with a little correctly -- that the foreign workers are taking their jobs or reducing their wages. not that much evidence for it but a little bit. but that makes them anxious and they do know, accurately, that these foreigners are making money and google is making money off of them so they feel resentful and the idea is to make sure that the relevant flows more directly to ordinary people. so, a portion of that wealth is generated comes to ordinary people. the foreign workers would make a lot of money relative to what they make in their home countries. ordinary americans who are currently hostile to immigration would see some of that benefit and maybe their hostility would be reduced. now, would this r
od to this are the people who don't interact with the people from other countries. the people who live around immigrant is, as we do in this neighborhood, for example, they don't -- they're not hostile to nonamericans. so the idea here was, there's this enorm mouse value here, and part of the nativism is understandable, people think, probably not contributely -- maybe with a little correctly -- that the foreign workers are taking their jobs or reducing their wages. not that much evidence for it...
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92
Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 92
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people are paid to coach people to pay video games. >> host: that's a thing. >> guest: it's a real career growing by the day. >> host: john tammy if you're goo at fast ball should woe be able to major in college football. >> guest: i think without question you should -- it's really the only worldwhile major you can do in college because unlike with business you can get -- you can run a company regardless of whether you went to college or not or your major. you can get into engineering or writing. college football is the one thing that you kind of need to do to make the nfl. it's an incredibly cerebral support and i and why we tale people who are log handed something that costs over 500,000 in the form of a football scholarship, why tell them once they're at school to focus their energies elsewhere? we don't tell business majors to do that even though a much smaller percentage of business majores will ever get a job at goldman sachs. we don't tell edge lick and journalie majors focussure energies elsewhere even though a small percentage of them will write a become or work for "the new york
people are paid to coach people to pay video games. >> host: that's a thing. >> guest: it's a real career growing by the day. >> host: john tammy if you're goo at fast ball should woe be able to major in college football. >> guest: i think without question you should -- it's really the only worldwhile major you can do in college because unlike with business you can get -- you can run a company regardless of whether you went to college or not or your major. you can get...
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people. with children they you know they move to the county they move to suburbs to better schools and for. safer streets and all that kind of stuff. there was a man. i was looking for you is a water how you doing that to keep you fit hold they have me i love my love that will keep you fit i. was going to bang. something good going to get you to you know we got other stuff just good to get to all ten of us out to sandwiches yeah oh sorry that's our brother. yeah you go. this month past i was right he's a pretty good zoom and i do her spirit everything that he say and i try to live by worry says one of the one of the advice to me is always do. it all here sometimes you run the people that you just really glad to see when you get out here that's what i was going this one of the brothers i was really glad to say i'm. sorry joe. jones. believe that anything that happens in a person's life is not random. and that there is a divine design behind it. baptized a young man i was passing the church and
people. with children they you know they move to the county they move to suburbs to better schools and for. safer streets and all that kind of stuff. there was a man. i was looking for you is a water how you doing that to keep you fit hold they have me i love my love that will keep you fit i. was going to bang. something good going to get you to you know we got other stuff just good to get to all ten of us out to sandwiches yeah oh sorry that's our brother. yeah you go. this month past i was...
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Aug 25, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 92
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nicer no truly black people no truly white people. there's just various shades, as we relate to each other. so, to say that things are shifting or changing, yeah, things get better, people make laws, we get a president, but still, underneath it, there's a problem that can always, as was the case with the jews in europe, fall backward into choose iwant to invite our viewers to call in and join news this conversation. walter mosley or special guest here on her foe uns speedway central, 202-748-8200. mountain some pacific, 202-748-8201 as we make our way through most of the 50 books that mr. mosley has written, fiction, and also some nonfiction as well. so we'd love for you to join news this conversation on this sunday afternoon. i ask the question because -- but if race relationses shaping and easy writes he has seen more black men of authority, black cops. >> guest: i think that he is seeing it, but also at the same time he is recognizing what you have to give up in order to move into that level of authority. easy is a guy -- he does f
nicer no truly black people no truly white people. there's just various shades, as we relate to each other. so, to say that things are shifting or changing, yeah, things get better, people make laws, we get a president, but still, underneath it, there's a problem that can always, as was the case with the jews in europe, fall backward into choose iwant to invite our viewers to call in and join news this conversation. walter mosley or special guest here on her foe uns speedway central,...
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Aug 28, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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eye 44
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do business how do people. and africans definitely have a more challenging time around the world as well with it. if you will people are experiencing is definitely something that they feel placid in the. whether it's confined to them that's another question. ten ten and the bird's eye could see you nodding their head i was seeking attention what were you thinking. yes thinking and . our. community in china flight many other. countries in the experience with country don't. experience. interaction and they raise cultural differences. but on the other hand they also. recognizing these issues should not prevent. seeing their racism and racial thinking which has a long history in their twentieth century and it's not only and it's also a media representation it's also in the alex rios social interactions and. presentations i pulled up but you had lines here to illustrate that point so this is from ports africa headline and chinese exhibit comparing africans to animals shows the problematic racial attitudes in china a
do business how do people. and africans definitely have a more challenging time around the world as well with it. if you will people are experiencing is definitely something that they feel placid in the. whether it's confined to them that's another question. ten ten and the bird's eye could see you nodding their head i was seeking attention what were you thinking. yes thinking and . our. community in china flight many other. countries in the experience with country don't. experience....
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Aug 17, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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eye 27
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you know we talk to who vulnerability but indigenous people are only vulnerable in relation to the people who have been making us vulnerable in research we are not inherently vulnerable and a lot of the protections that are put in place at institutional levels are done in such a way that it sounds as if indigenous people cannot make up their own minds or consent to the research themselves and the institutions are there to do that for us when in fact we know that we are able and capable to make those decisions for ourselves which is why many indigenous communities in canada and around the world are creating their own codes of ethics and are simply saying no to researchers who don't adhere to those particles but julie i hear what you're saying there i want to share another example with you all and our audience this is from pam on twitter and julie you actually saw this tweet just a few seconds ago and favorite it so pam writes schools universities and some media historicity is us we want to live this way we once did these things instead of teaching us as we are now the good the inspirationa
you know we talk to who vulnerability but indigenous people are only vulnerable in relation to the people who have been making us vulnerable in research we are not inherently vulnerable and a lot of the protections that are put in place at institutional levels are done in such a way that it sounds as if indigenous people cannot make up their own minds or consent to the research themselves and the institutions are there to do that for us when in fact we know that we are able and capable to make...
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Aug 8, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 68
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people are not organized. people want to mobilize. when you are organized, you don't depend upon the newspaper or the media to get the word out. gil scott he ron, very popular back in the day, said the revolution will not be televised. you're not going to find out about it on facebook. you're going to find out about it because you took the time to go into the neighborhoods and talk to people about whom the system has some kind of fear because once those people get together, hey, that's why they had to take out malcolm. that's why they had to take out king. if you have to have that kind of organization that this power structure is afraid of, then you're on to something and you will not be doing that by way of facebook. so, i'm suggesting that the reason we can't do it is because we have not reached -- she's telling me to wrap up out here and she's looking at me over here. you asked me that question, all right. i'm going to stop. >> all right. and our time keeper has indicated we have very limited time so i'd like the -- >> i know. she'
people are not organized. people want to mobilize. when you are organized, you don't depend upon the newspaper or the media to get the word out. gil scott he ron, very popular back in the day, said the revolution will not be televised. you're not going to find out about it on facebook. you're going to find out about it because you took the time to go into the neighborhoods and talk to people about whom the system has some kind of fear because once those people get together, hey, that's why they...
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Aug 3, 2018
08/18
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if people can't be said, if ,eople -- people can't be fed people cannot take care of their families, then it is senseless to just come together on social issues and walk mississippi fields together. ultimately, we have to come to a place where we are sharing goods, resources and power. [applause] and if we cannot come to that place, then it isn't worth integrating into that, and i fear that my dream has become a nightmare. so, in conclusion, what we have before us are two critical options. we have the option of economics for the people and by the people, or the option of economics by a few people for themselves. [applause] this has been the traditional model, and i believe that if we are sincere in our mission, sincere in our mission to touch the lives of individuals, sincere in our mission to make certain that democrats take hold of offices and effectuate the change that they want to see. we can no longer be afraid. we can no longer hide in the shadows and be afraid to move forward on progressive agendas. for if jackson, mississippi can push forward a progressive agenda by 93%, in a
if people can't be said, if ,eople -- people can't be fed people cannot take care of their families, then it is senseless to just come together on social issues and walk mississippi fields together. ultimately, we have to come to a place where we are sharing goods, resources and power. [applause] and if we cannot come to that place, then it isn't worth integrating into that, and i fear that my dream has become a nightmare. so, in conclusion, what we have before us are two critical options. we...
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implementation of both punishment and arrests and people weren't interested people had a lot of problems with crime in the countryside and it tended to be crime that the state didn't prioritize things like drunken beating fast hooliganism that post a real threat arson to people's daily lives prioritize so they wanted the ability to arrest people that destabilized their lives on the spot now you told me before the. people in academia really advise you against using the word democracy when it comes to stalinist russia because they include this notion of civil society that is central to today idea of democracy but. what you're describing just there wasn't talent terrorism about point of time either there was somebody in moscow with a limit the security apparatus the rest of the country was essentially a lots of self governance is that an accurate. challenge hereon ism is in general has sort of been debunked within the academia simply because more regional studies have proved that they simply didn't have the manpower or the infrastructure to monitor people frequently you know i look at colle
implementation of both punishment and arrests and people weren't interested people had a lot of problems with crime in the countryside and it tended to be crime that the state didn't prioritize things like drunken beating fast hooliganism that post a real threat arson to people's daily lives prioritize so they wanted the ability to arrest people that destabilized their lives on the spot now you told me before the. people in academia really advise you against using the word democracy when it...
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560
Aug 24, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN
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eye 560
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our great people. these are great people.ust this week, we learned that iowa authorities have changed ill wleel ale ynd -- they charged an illegal alien in the murder of a college student molly tibets. the amazing thing charged an is that everybody about molie. beautiful, wonderful, incredible person. everybody loved her. everybody that met her loved her. and the father was saying she's coming back, she's coming back. and i was saying maybe he's right. this went on for a long time. when they found out that it was this horrible, illegal imgrabt that viciously killed her, all of a sudden that story went down. they didn't want to cover it the way it should have been covered. but what happened to mollea was a disgrace. and our hearts go out. we mourn for her family. in recent weeks, an elderly homeless woman in new york was allegedly beaten to death by a twice deported illegal alien that was not supposed to be in this country. in the sanctuary city of philadelphia, -- i went to school was talking in philadelp officials released a
our great people. these are great people.ust this week, we learned that iowa authorities have changed ill wleel ale ynd -- they charged an illegal alien in the murder of a college student molly tibets. the amazing thing charged an is that everybody about molie. beautiful, wonderful, incredible person. everybody loved her. everybody that met her loved her. and the father was saying she's coming back, she's coming back. and i was saying maybe he's right. this went on for a long time. when they...
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82
Aug 1, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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eye 82
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the situation obviously people are pins people are saying that. it is calming down at the moment the worry now is some of the opposition supporters say there is she's going to go home they've run into the city since and they're waiting for it to be quiet and they say they plan to come back the result is that because according to them they insist that this election has been stolen and they insist that their leader has won the silage since sunday piazza saying the opposite that your commission is saying that you know rigging but obviously some people in zimbabwe bill believe. no and neither does the opposition leader has tweeted that we have won this election whereas you have president m.s.n. money and god was calling for calm. he is calling for calm he kind of has to i think right now from the results that we speak we know that some people do this to me support the opposition and some people do the voice the ruling party so it is technically a divided the nation and he has to come out and trying unify the nation trying to keep people calm and tryin
the situation obviously people are pins people are saying that. it is calming down at the moment the worry now is some of the opposition supporters say there is she's going to go home they've run into the city since and they're waiting for it to be quiet and they say they plan to come back the result is that because according to them they insist that this election has been stolen and they insist that their leader has won the silage since sunday piazza saying the opposite that your commission is...
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142
Aug 5, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 142
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it might be people who share your political views, people have the same small hometown is you, people went to high school with you. and it lets you form communities around your interests. the second thing it does is it gives you a place to talk to them about this. and it is really bad at that. it's really good at giving a directory. in really bad at giving a place to talk once you have found each other. and he supposes the reason it's so bad about that is that facebook makes its money there what's called engagement. which is how long you stay on the server. the thing is, if you are doing is being touch with her family, or people that went to the same schools you, on the average day, you have not much to say to them. you just want to kind of exchange a heartbeat with your family. i am on a group chat with my family and a couple of messages go by a day. that there is a kid at the sports game, that i paid off our mortgage or whatever. little small things. and it is a continuous tempo stuff. it's extremely satisfying and externally fulfilling. what it's not is compelling. it doesn't keep
it might be people who share your political views, people have the same small hometown is you, people went to high school with you. and it lets you form communities around your interests. the second thing it does is it gives you a place to talk to them about this. and it is really bad at that. it's really good at giving a directory. in really bad at giving a place to talk once you have found each other. and he supposes the reason it's so bad about that is that facebook makes its money there...
60
60
Aug 8, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 60
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when we had the poor people's campaign, 600 people arrived in detroit in 1968. they were part of this general crusade, this march that was on its way to washington. they stopped in detroit. they were confronted by the police, ultimately. the only brutal, the only real violence that came out of that whole campaign happened right in detroit. obviously, it was familiar turf for us. because we've been struggling against the police brutality there for a number of years. so it was not at all uncommon to run into that situation. so, they -- reverend c.l. franklin, the father of aretha franklin, his son, cecil franklin, he headed up the detroit branch of the campaign, and i'm sure -- i don't have the time to get into any of those details, but certainly there's a panel coming that are going to look at that, i think, in a very, very resonant way so we can understand exactly what came out of that. for 35 years now, i've been writing for the amsterdam news in harlem, and i've been doing editorials on the front page. i'm up to number 79 now, and that theme is, and picking up
when we had the poor people's campaign, 600 people arrived in detroit in 1968. they were part of this general crusade, this march that was on its way to washington. they stopped in detroit. they were confronted by the police, ultimately. the only brutal, the only real violence that came out of that whole campaign happened right in detroit. obviously, it was familiar turf for us. because we've been struggling against the police brutality there for a number of years. so it was not at all uncommon...
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Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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eye 71
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easing but southern india's problems are getting worse floods in kerala for eight hundred thousand people from their homes. hello i'm asking this here without is there live from doha are also coming up. questions for the trumpet ministration over reports of an american made weapon was used in the strike in yemen that killed forty children. desperate to escape from economic and political crisis but venezuelans face new restrictions from their neighbors. nicholas you're in touch with. a movie drawing big crowds and breaking racial barriers in hollywood. there are tens of thousands of people still stranded in the southern indian state of carola after days of heavy flooding there the worst monsoon floods there in a century and more than one hundred ninety people have died in just over a week but there is some good news the rains are easing and major roads have been cleared so help can get three hundred thomas reports from carola. right there is where the dry roads and the flood wall is again that is the spots to which all the rice some bottles of drinking water being rolls and you can see thi
easing but southern india's problems are getting worse floods in kerala for eight hundred thousand people from their homes. hello i'm asking this here without is there live from doha are also coming up. questions for the trumpet ministration over reports of an american made weapon was used in the strike in yemen that killed forty children. desperate to escape from economic and political crisis but venezuelans face new restrictions from their neighbors. nicholas you're in touch with. a movie...
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75
Aug 22, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 75
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if you give some people their rights, you're inflicting it on other people. this is not the notion of universal natural rights with the declaration of independence. this is not the notion of human rights as we understand it today. it's this very parochial narrow racist constricted version of rights. and this notion of white grievance, that he puts forward. he says you know, you are discriminating against whites. by giving black people rights, that's his argument and it echoes can be found in the 17th, 18th, all this talk about reverse discrimination. that notion that somehow if you try to rectify previous wrong in this case, 250 years of slavery. is that you are somehow inflicting that on others this is a direct quote of his civil rights veto. in fact the distinction of race and color is by the bill. made to operate in favor of the colored and against the white race. that's the kernel of his reasoning. it's not even states' rights, right? you know, his, his whole argument is extremely racist. >> in july, 1866. the famous memphis and new orleans riots, they're
if you give some people their rights, you're inflicting it on other people. this is not the notion of universal natural rights with the declaration of independence. this is not the notion of human rights as we understand it today. it's this very parochial narrow racist constricted version of rights. and this notion of white grievance, that he puts forward. he says you know, you are discriminating against whites. by giving black people rights, that's his argument and it echoes can be found in...
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102
Aug 4, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN
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eye 102
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other people. how are we living our civic gospel? how are we living our civic gospel? the demand for us to reject the normalcy of injustice, the normalcy of apathy, of indifference, and rise to the high ground of activism, engagement, of love. that is the last person i want to end with. washington.hassan i'm big a believer that if this country has not broken your heart, then you don't love her enough. because there are things that are savagely wrong in this country. there is a normalcy of injustice that we have accepted. tell you, newark has onlyd me a wisdom that can -- a sense of purpose that can only come from shared pain. the heart is the only organ that still works after it's been broken. hsans why i say washington, i tell you this ofry with a burden of shame making mistakes. hassan and his crew, i watched them grow up over the decades i lived in these high-rise projects. projects live at the top of the hill where i now live. he and his friends, they were amazing. they used to hang out in the
other people. how are we living our civic gospel? how are we living our civic gospel? the demand for us to reject the normalcy of injustice, the normalcy of apathy, of indifference, and rise to the high ground of activism, engagement, of love. that is the last person i want to end with. washington.hassan i'm big a believer that if this country has not broken your heart, then you don't love her enough. because there are things that are savagely wrong in this country. there is a normalcy of...
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74
Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN
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eye 74
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trans people and queer people. we have been here and we are finally acknowledging the issues and the problems. is going to take for us to change. it is so deep. i don't want to make it too long. i think that in the black community, we have to not just talk about it or come together, we generally have to change the processes in the patterns that we have seen for so many years. we have to talk about mental health. [applause] amiyah: i'm a very private person but my family has someone in their 60's who has been bipolar their entire life. imagine that. with no medication, no diagnosis. it is someone who is very close to me. you didn't have to deal with that that long. it's the same thing for sexuality. you know the conversations get deep. you know the things we sweep under the rug. let's get the rug up. [applause] i know that we can and i feel, just to be here again, i'm taken aback when my family and friends heard that i was coming out to speak with the naacp. they said, i didn't know they supported us. and i said, ye
trans people and queer people. we have been here and we are finally acknowledging the issues and the problems. is going to take for us to change. it is so deep. i don't want to make it too long. i think that in the black community, we have to not just talk about it or come together, we generally have to change the processes in the patterns that we have seen for so many years. we have to talk about mental health. [applause] amiyah: i'm a very private person but my family has someone in their...
72
72
Aug 7, 2018
08/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 72
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you have white people, hispanic people, african-american people, and it is more focused around economic issues. it was focused around the broader injustices, that are not just southern problems, but are everywhere. but, there are new voices in the civil rights movement as well. former student nonviolent courting committee chair, nick, we talked about nick and previous lectures, was one of the students who was a leader of the student loan civil rights movement in the early 1960s. by the middle of the 1960s, some of these student leaders are shifting their focus and message, and that includes carmichael, a chair in mississippi. by 1966, 67, and 68, the language of civil rights has not been about let us sit at your lunch counter, let us participate in a broader live society, but one that is more strongly africanist, and is a message of black nationalism. one that says we cannot wait for white society to get its act together, and so much change will be necessary in order for justice to be achieved, that we had to do it with more peace. in these nonviolent ways are not going to be -- the use
you have white people, hispanic people, african-american people, and it is more focused around economic issues. it was focused around the broader injustices, that are not just southern problems, but are everywhere. but, there are new voices in the civil rights movement as well. former student nonviolent courting committee chair, nick, we talked about nick and previous lectures, was one of the students who was a leader of the student loan civil rights movement in the early 1960s. by the middle...
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97
Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 97
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condemning buon't see may people condemning but also for those everyday people. >>host: what is a block chain? >> it is underpinning bitcoin but it makes it possible to have digital access that cannot be reproduced. think about it like a magic ledger system when one person write something down then it appears that all of these different ledgers all over the world. so what happens with all of the the problem of people making mistakes. if you have all of these people that verify what you put down is correct then simultaneously all over the world it cannot be erased you can put information down that no one can get rid of. it is it is a really great resource applied to all different types of sectors. >>host: how many different types of bitcoin are there? >> there are many digital currencies. >>host: bitcoin is a brand? >> it is the original crypto currency that they created from block chain now people have used the same block chain to create other crypto currencies. >>host: is bitcoin a generic word? >> it is used as a generic word but it should not be but a lot of p
condemning buon't see may people condemning but also for those everyday people. >>host: what is a block chain? >> it is underpinning bitcoin but it makes it possible to have digital access that cannot be reproduced. think about it like a magic ledger system when one person write something down then it appears that all of these different ledgers all over the world. so what happens with all of the the problem of people making mistakes. if you have all of these people that verify what...
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60
Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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BBCNEWS
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eye 60
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people respond.heir own relationship with god and what it means for them but pope francis has been a powerful witness. faith is not about doctoring or teaching but it is about relationships, withjesus christ and one another. pope francis put that back at the heart as did pope benedict. but how pope francis calls us to recognise that. our faith means nothing if it does not involve the goodness of one another, love of one another. you can see the reve na nt love of one another. you can see the revenant is, love of one another. you can see the revena nt is, people love of one another. you can see the revenant is, people are praying with pope francis as we watch. it is so important to have these quiet moments. for him, personally, so they have that sense of presence with people when he meets them. for many people it hasn't been a question of a loss of faith but perhaps confidence in the hierarchy of the church, rather than their fundamental faith? in of the church, rather than their fundamentalfaith? in
people respond.heir own relationship with god and what it means for them but pope francis has been a powerful witness. faith is not about doctoring or teaching but it is about relationships, withjesus christ and one another. pope francis put that back at the heart as did pope benedict. but how pope francis calls us to recognise that. our faith means nothing if it does not involve the goodness of one another, love of one another. you can see the reve na nt love of one another. you can see the...
45
45
Aug 21, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 45
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we owe the people that we interact with, the people who are applying to us, the people who are the companies and the people that are an i -- applying to us we owe them courtesy and respect. we offer them, fair, lawful handling of of their cases. predictable. >> yes, but we serve the people. and that is what i try to and what i have been telling the employees of u.s. cis in all the many town halls i've had in the town halls, however long since last october. i always reinforce this and, which i think it's an important point. >> i'm glad to hear the word adjudications again because us old-timers remember when that was the name of the bureau within the immigration and naturalization service, the old ins that handled this work. before that it was examinations and then became adjudications and then became services. i think it is important to remember what this is all about, but, now, in recent years the agency had developed a reputation as being susceptible to cronyism, vulnerable to fraud and really the image evoked was a giant rubber stamp where much of the emphasis was on the quantity of applic
we owe the people that we interact with, the people who are applying to us, the people who are the companies and the people that are an i -- applying to us we owe them courtesy and respect. we offer them, fair, lawful handling of of their cases. predictable. >> yes, but we serve the people. and that is what i try to and what i have been telling the employees of u.s. cis in all the many town halls i've had in the town halls, however long since last october. i always reinforce this and,...
118
118
Aug 26, 2018
08/18
by
MSNBCW
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eye 118
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a lot of apps are about other people, what do other people think? what are other people doing?t's great. i use the apps. there aren't that many places to go think about yourself. what do i want? what are my inspirations? what do i want to try out that's not judged by anyone. feel like prin tres is a safe place to get the life they want to lead. >>> i'm here with this week's elevator pitcher, julian burke who is here to tell about your creation, the dread sock, which you are sporting right now. >> yes. >> welcome. >> thank you. >> how long ago did you start the company? >> 2005. >> have you raised money? >> we have raised a little. we have to branch out. >> was that first amount to friends and family? >> no, i funded it most of the time with my other career. >> got it. >> it kind of got away from me. it's becoming big and bigger so i need investments. >> here is your chance to see how you do with investers and entrepreneurs. we have two judges today. the first is scott, the chief product officer at adobe and co-founder of behanced. the second person, she is the founder and ceo o
a lot of apps are about other people, what do other people think? what are other people doing?t's great. i use the apps. there aren't that many places to go think about yourself. what do i want? what are my inspirations? what do i want to try out that's not judged by anyone. feel like prin tres is a safe place to get the life they want to lead. >>> i'm here with this week's elevator pitcher, julian burke who is here to tell about your creation, the dread sock, which you are sporting...
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75
Aug 14, 2018
08/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 75
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you've been encouraging to take to the streets are students, they're poorer people, people worried aboutcurity benefits and they're the ones in the line of fire and yet you keep telling them to keep up the street protests, to keep up the street action. do you think that is really a responsible position for you to take given what is happening on the streets? absolutely it is. that's the only way that we can put pressure on, with the people on the streets. i myself was on the streets, i was on the streets yesterday in a protest and i will be on wednesday. you have to understand that this is a national revolt by all kind of people, not only students and people from the working sector. this is an entire country trying to demand change. one thing that has been fundamental in our call for protest is they have to be peaceful, they have to be in the most peaceful manner to try to express our demands of bringing a change to the country, trying to bring democracy. i think it's completely responsible, the civil resistance, the marches, the strikes, all kinds of protests, as long as they're peaceful
you've been encouraging to take to the streets are students, they're poorer people, people worried aboutcurity benefits and they're the ones in the line of fire and yet you keep telling them to keep up the street protests, to keep up the street action. do you think that is really a responsible position for you to take given what is happening on the streets? absolutely it is. that's the only way that we can put pressure on, with the people on the streets. i myself was on the streets, i was on...
94
94
Aug 16, 2018
08/18
by
CSPAN2
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eye 94
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black people killing other black people. seeing them as less than human in the way of which of the celebration of a certain kind of ethic of courage. on one sense, better to do what on wax than in real life. but it's happening in your life too. so is it reinforcing it? i would never argue that it's causing it. i will say this, as the great - - says, everybody ain't guilty but everybody's responsible. all of us have a responsibilit . r kelly, i interviewed him one night, 2:00 on my marvin gaye book. an amazing genius but there's something deeply and profoundly wrong. not only with the fact that he was abused. and then he abused. but the culture of neglect of the very bodies of gay and lesbian young people. abuse young black people. of women. who have been abused. which is the #metoo movement insistence that the rage they feel in the face of neglect has to be privileged and made a priority as we grapple with the place of women's bodies in our political imagination. so yeah, we've got to wrestle with that stuff. and rappers can
black people killing other black people. seeing them as less than human in the way of which of the celebration of a certain kind of ethic of courage. on one sense, better to do what on wax than in real life. but it's happening in your life too. so is it reinforcing it? i would never argue that it's causing it. i will say this, as the great - - says, everybody ain't guilty but everybody's responsible. all of us have a responsibilit . r kelly, i interviewed him one night, 2:00 on my marvin gaye...
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Aug 19, 2018
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three people were injured.manfrom birmingham, salih khater, has been charged. he's been charged on two counts. firstly, attempting to murder members of the public. secondly, attempting to murder police officers. police say they are treating this case as terrorism—related on the basis of the methodology, they say, of the iconic location, and the fact that civilians, members of the public and police officers were targeted. salih khater is due to appear at westminster magistrates' court on monday. jon donnison reporting, there, from westminster. a scottish man accused of running a precious metals fraud scheme in the united states has been placed on the fbi's "most wanted" list. 65—year—old james ward is alleged to have offered investors bogus deals involving precious metals. the fbi allege he received more than £300,000. he's been on the run since 2012. the former conservative mp sir peter tapsell has died aged 88. sir peter was "father of the house" when he stood down as mp for louth and horncastle in 2015. he ha
three people were injured.manfrom birmingham, salih khater, has been charged. he's been charged on two counts. firstly, attempting to murder members of the public. secondly, attempting to murder police officers. police say they are treating this case as terrorism—related on the basis of the methodology, they say, of the iconic location, and the fact that civilians, members of the public and police officers were targeted. salih khater is due to appear at westminster magistrates' court on...
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there are some people or isis people were. trying to. create some. one in the seas. sought to fill the camp first story they were told would be too dangerous because of the presence of islamic state fighters a safe zone or at least it's meant to be but the jordanian military pilot who took us in wouldn't fly over it and the isis fighters these people fled from are inside it so the presence of ice on the camp hasn't been a secret washington stated goal in syria is the defeat of islamic state terrorists so it's hard to believe that their presence in an area controlled by the international coalition would go undetected if the u.s. military isn't aware of the issue your team is more than ready to provide open source information r.t. has reached out operation here at resolve to find out what part of the article was misinformation but we've yet to hear from them that's international would like to know what part of this article was ridiculous misinformation if there are no ice or fighters in the area what is the mission of the us military base in the region given the stated
there are some people or isis people were. trying to. create some. one in the seas. sought to fill the camp first story they were told would be too dangerous because of the presence of islamic state fighters a safe zone or at least it's meant to be but the jordanian military pilot who took us in wouldn't fly over it and the isis fighters these people fled from are inside it so the presence of ice on the camp hasn't been a secret washington stated goal in syria is the defeat of islamic state...