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Apr 23, 2014
04/14
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now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever. quick that is democratic governor george wallace in his inauguration address after winning the race for governor. that was back in 1963. nikole hannah-jones, that was more than half a century ago, and that is the title of your series that you have spent a year investigating and writing. we are not necessarily saying what george wallace was predicting would be true, because it is not. what george wallace and others like him wanted was all-white schools. don't reallyools exist anymore. but all black schools do. at is the segregation today, is that 60 years after brown and really i shows through a single generation of one family, integration is gone for many students. >> in new york, a study shows new york has the most segregated schools in the country. >> absolutely. this is one of the things where i hoped the story would do some myth-busting. we all have this perception of the south. the south did integrate. we have never seen true desegregation in the northeast or midwest. if you look
now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever. quick that is democratic governor george wallace in his inauguration address after winning the race for governor. that was back in 1963. nikole hannah-jones, that was more than half a century ago, and that is the title of your series that you have spent a year investigating and writing. we are not necessarily saying what george wallace was predicting would be true, because it is not. what george wallace and others like him wanted was all-white...
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Apr 19, 2014
04/14
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she's on her way back to segregation for threatening an officer. >> know who i am?g in here? >> because they call me stupid. >> you didn't. really. >> yes, i did. i won't let an inmate call me stupid. why a v.o. call me stupid. >> okay. at least you're honest about it. >> room? >> oh, yeah, we got room at the inn. you going to threaten my staff that's a half a step away from hitting my staff. i wouldn't be surprised if they do put a charge of threatening a public official which is a state offense in this state. >> though it's unlikely criminal charges will follow, the normally energetic lopez will spend at least a few days in segregation. locked down 23 hours a day with nothing to do. >> you won't get your things for the first 24 hours. nothing. hey, that's why our hotel sucks will never make travelocity or orbits. we'll show you to your room but we won't put a mint on your pillow. >> joseph giroux is also unhappy with the sparse accommodations of his segregation cell and asked to move to general population. awaiting trial on 14 charges related to an alleged crime s
she's on her way back to segregation for threatening an officer. >> know who i am?g in here? >> because they call me stupid. >> you didn't. really. >> yes, i did. i won't let an inmate call me stupid. why a v.o. call me stupid. >> okay. at least you're honest about it. >> room? >> oh, yeah, we got room at the inn. you going to threaten my staff that's a half a step away from hitting my staff. i wouldn't be surprised if they do put a charge of...
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Apr 13, 2014
04/14
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his long stay in segregation will continue. daniela guzman remains in segregation as well.he has decided to make the best of it. >> i met a sheriff the other day who was really happy and he said, i'd like to make the best out of any [ bleep ] situation i'm in. that's the way i'm looking at it now. >> not only has guzman, a former high school wrestler, begun to exercise, she's acquired a personal trainer. >> you can do it. put your back into it. >> i'm tired. >> hit the pushups. do it. just get it over with. just do five pushups. >> it's her upstairs neighbor, kelsey erwin. >> now go to the arm dips. then you'll walk it out. >> i still haven't lost hope. i basically came to like tell myself, you're probably going to be in here for the rest of your life. get used to it. >> what guzman can't accept is living in the administrative segregation unit for much longer. >> i'm going to see if they can take me out of here, man. >> yeah, get out of the ad-seg. >> what? >> you don't want these loud ass bitches all around. >> it sucks. certainly parts entirely. but it's mind over matter.
his long stay in segregation will continue. daniela guzman remains in segregation as well.he has decided to make the best of it. >> i met a sheriff the other day who was really happy and he said, i'd like to make the best out of any [ bleep ] situation i'm in. that's the way i'm looking at it now. >> not only has guzman, a former high school wrestler, begun to exercise, she's acquired a personal trainer. >> you can do it. put your back into it. >> i'm tired. >> hit...
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Apr 12, 2014
04/14
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ain't got no -- in here. >> he's not in security segregation status in which things are taken away, cup and spoon and toothbrush and toothpaste, he can get it back but it's taken away as security status. any time he comes out of the cell, he has to be handcuffed and shackled. we're going to conduct a board hearing for you and i'll explain everything to you. >> it will determine whether silk spends his time in segregation or if he can return to general population prior to his transfer to prison. >> any evidence to present at the hearing? >> no. >> i need you to read through this -- >> i didn't do nothing, man. >> that's why you're having this. >> it don't matter what i say, i'm always wrong. inmate is always wrong. when it comes to anybody who works for the system, we're always wrong. >> this is why we're doing the hearing. >> but it don't. >> yes, it does. >> the assault is considered among the most serious of infractions and staff must also stay on top of a litany of others, like gambling. >> they come take that [ bleep ] away from you. that ain't acceptable here. >> gambling might not
ain't got no -- in here. >> he's not in security segregation status in which things are taken away, cup and spoon and toothbrush and toothpaste, he can get it back but it's taken away as security status. any time he comes out of the cell, he has to be handcuffed and shackled. we're going to conduct a board hearing for you and i'll explain everything to you. >> it will determine whether silk spends his time in segregation or if he can return to general population prior to his...
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Apr 18, 2014
04/14
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tomorrow, and segregation forever. >> segregation forever. today the sound of those now infamous words ringing out into the crisp alabama air are enough to send a shir down anyone's spine. while the thauft a democratic governor reading a declaration written by a ku klux klansman is indeed chilling. you would like to think we've come a long way since then. just five months after his inauguration address, george wallace tried to block two black students from entering the university of alabama, but he was forced to step aside and the university was desegregated. a little over a year later president lyndon johnson signed the civil rights act of 1964 into law. remember, it had been ten years since the supreme court's unanimous brown versus the board of education decision ruling separate but equal had no place in public education. so progress. okay. maybe not. in march of 1967 the state of alabama had to be ordered to desegregate after a federal agency concluded the state still had an official policy favoring racial segregation in public education.
tomorrow, and segregation forever. >> segregation forever. today the sound of those now infamous words ringing out into the crisp alabama air are enough to send a shir down anyone's spine. while the thauft a democratic governor reading a declaration written by a ku klux klansman is indeed chilling. you would like to think we've come a long way since then. just five months after his inauguration address, george wallace tried to block two black students from entering the university of...
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Apr 23, 2014
04/14
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was segregation the right place for a person like adam? >> you just defined why we don't like to use segregation. but sometimes it's necessary. mr. brulotte was engaged in some very, very serious behavior while he was in general population, so without a doubt it was the right place for him. >> did he spend too long in seg? >> you know, that's a real hard question to answer. there's a lot of gray area in some of the decisions that we make. there's no exact science to any one of these guys. you have to try to figure them out as we go along. but ultimately when we're moving him back into the general population, we have to be certain that the staff are going to be safe, that the other inmates are going to be safe, and that he's going to be safe. >> before you went to seg, did you ever imagine that you would cut yourself like that? >> no, never. i didn't even know what it was. and i seen a couple people doing it, so then i started doing it. >> do you think it's changed you forever? >> i don't know. have to find out. can try to be normal again.
was segregation the right place for a person like adam? >> you just defined why we don't like to use segregation. but sometimes it's necessary. mr. brulotte was engaged in some very, very serious behavior while he was in general population, so without a doubt it was the right place for him. >> did he spend too long in seg? >> you know, that's a real hard question to answer. there's a lot of gray area in some of the decisions that we make. there's no exact science to any one of...
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Apr 18, 2014
04/14
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are we going to perpetuate segregation in our society?confronted policymakers at a federal office building in san francisco. heumann: the first exciting point between us and the media was trying to get the media not to look at us as sick people but to really focus on this as a civil rights issue. poussaint: 26 days later, federal officials agreed to sign the regulations, and the protesters declared victory. heumann: it was the longest demonstration takeover of a federal building in the history of the united states, and still is. poussaint: every federal agency developed a set of regulations to enforce 504, which gave disabled individuals better access to public places. it laid the groundwork for the passage in 1990 of the broader americans with disabilities act, known as ada. we believed that we had won a victory and it was a very important victory, but we were not so naive to believe that this one victory was going to result in the end of discrimination. poussaint: in 1992, air force sergeant bobby coward became the innocent victim of an
are we going to perpetuate segregation in our society?confronted policymakers at a federal office building in san francisco. heumann: the first exciting point between us and the media was trying to get the media not to look at us as sick people but to really focus on this as a civil rights issue. poussaint: 26 days later, federal officials agreed to sign the regulations, and the protesters declared victory. heumann: it was the longest demonstration takeover of a federal building in the history...
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Apr 25, 2014
04/14
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neighborhoods are very segregated.ou and magnet programs draw attendance lines around racially segregated areas, then you get segregated schools. there is a great deal of gerrymandering that goes along. antral high school is neighborhood school, but it does not draw its students from its neighborhood. the neighborhood is predominantly white and racially mixed. the students come from the west and which is two miles down the road. that is almost entirely black. we see this notion of neighborhood schools and school district that are building schools in segregated areas as opposed to building them on the borders. there are areas where they can schools, they are not calling it resegregation but it is having that effect. host: is this just a southern issue? guest: absolutely not. i found it interesting over the last few weeks since the article ran. a lot of northerners have looked down their noses at the south and sent comments about the south being backwards. the south is the only place in the country that did desegregate.
neighborhoods are very segregated.ou and magnet programs draw attendance lines around racially segregated areas, then you get segregated schools. there is a great deal of gerrymandering that goes along. antral high school is neighborhood school, but it does not draw its students from its neighborhood. the neighborhood is predominantly white and racially mixed. the students come from the west and which is two miles down the road. that is almost entirely black. we see this notion of neighborhood...
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Apr 25, 2014
04/14
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governor with the famous speech, segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever. he talk about nothing but race. fifty years ago in september, this month, he flew to baltimore, my home city, and announced he was going to run for president and never mentioned race. he never mentioned segregation again. he turned on a dime when the mash much on washington made it obvious that in the future, talking overtly about race was no longer going to be respectable, but addressed it and said he's running to restore local government against big government by pointy headed bureaucrats, tyrannical judges, and tax spin legislators, and he never denigrated the race of any person or group of people in history, and peoplemented to believe it. that's the beginning of remembering history and beginning of the vocabulary of modern politics. if you don't believe that big government opposition today and that the notion that what makes me safe and makes me free is not all of the pain staking ties built up, and the pistol i carry in the star books, if you don't believe that that's not driven
governor with the famous speech, segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever. he talk about nothing but race. fifty years ago in september, this month, he flew to baltimore, my home city, and announced he was going to run for president and never mentioned race. he never mentioned segregation again. he turned on a dime when the mash much on washington made it obvious that in the future, talking overtly about race was no longer going to be respectable, but addressed it and said...
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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as he is led to a single person segregation cell, cedric has much to say.or a while, i was standing by the code, believing that as long as i don't talk, as long as i don't snitch, i'll be all right. there's no way in hell my brother would throw me under the bus, so to speak. now, i don't say it with great pride, trust me, i don't say it with great pride at all that i have to do what's best for me and mine. so, i got to start talking, you know, to save my own ass. >> when you say you have to talk, what does that mean? >> tell them everything i know. >> that indicates to me you have awareness of this crime? >> yes, i do. i have awareness of the crime, yes, i do. >> how did you come about this awareness? >> it was handed to me. by both, two of the three perpetrators that did the crime. >> who were the two of the three? >> i'd rather not say. right now. do i got anything to do with the crime? no, i do not. did i kill anyone? no, i did not. only one person that's implicated my name in this crime. unfortunately, that's my brother. you know, you have an attorney w
as he is led to a single person segregation cell, cedric has much to say.or a while, i was standing by the code, believing that as long as i don't talk, as long as i don't snitch, i'll be all right. there's no way in hell my brother would throw me under the bus, so to speak. now, i don't say it with great pride, trust me, i don't say it with great pride at all that i have to do what's best for me and mine. so, i got to start talking, you know, to save my own ass. >> when you say you have...
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Apr 24, 2014
04/14
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civil rights it was the segregation. the courts ordered it, it happened, schools are left to their own devices. how do we turp it around. >> the supreme court is limiting the tools that school districts have. if you are not under a court order you can't use race as a factor in your assignment. communities have to decide if this is something they want. there are examples. louisville, kentucky, and others have a continuing in waite county they use income. and louisville, is race. >> they are the exceptions, rather than the norm, this is a sound. >> right. they are the exception. and one of the things i wanted to show in the article is the south is important, because it did integrate and has more to lose. in the north-east and the midwest we have high degrees of segregation, and there's never been a real intreg grags. >> fascinating work that you have down. thank you for sharing op "consider this". we appreciate it. >> now to ukraine, another bad day for that country and the relationship between the united states and russia
civil rights it was the segregation. the courts ordered it, it happened, schools are left to their own devices. how do we turp it around. >> the supreme court is limiting the tools that school districts have. if you are not under a court order you can't use race as a factor in your assignment. communities have to decide if this is something they want. there are examples. louisville, kentucky, and others have a continuing in waite county they use income. and louisville, is race. >>...
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Apr 12, 2014
04/14
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evans was immediately placed in security segregation. or s seg. when he was escorted to medical evans was upset he was blamed for the fight with the other inmates. >> why is the other person not that i was fighting? he did. the whole pod seen it. >> i got there, you had the broom around his neck. >> no, i didn't have no broom around his nick. he fell on it. you trying to prove, man. >> he grabbed the broom. i took it from him. the whole pod seen that. i can't wait to go in front of mcintyre with this one. >> evans is not laughing for long. due to be released from jail in just eight days, he was charged with a new crime, felonious assault against officer may. his stay was extended. you must remain until the new charge is resolved in court. evans pled not guilty, but if convicted, he could be sentenced to eight years in prison. other inmates like perry mckinney and his identical twin brother herbert mckinney don't get into much trouble in jail but present a different security issue. >> it does create a security problem for us because it will be diff
evans was immediately placed in security segregation. or s seg. when he was escorted to medical evans was upset he was blamed for the fight with the other inmates. >> why is the other person not that i was fighting? he did. the whole pod seen it. >> i got there, you had the broom around his neck. >> no, i didn't have no broom around his nick. he fell on it. you trying to prove, man. >> he grabbed the broom. i took it from him. the whole pod seen that. i can't wait to go...
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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and it turns out she did because her best friend michelle wise was also in segregation. >> i'm like ifing, i might as well fight her anyway and go to seg. i knew michelle was down there. i would rather be where i know somebody. she encourages me to do well. it works. i listen to her. i don't listen to nobody but her. >> during the one hour she is allowed outside her cell, baker was able to visit with wise. but wise recently returned to general population. >> ready to go, baker? >> yes, sir. >> all right. >> now it's time for baker to return to general population as well. she's going to housing unit f-22, not f-20, where michelle wise was assigned. >> why the sour face when i told you you were going to 22? >>> coming up -- back in general population, trenity baker works the system and another inmate to get the housing assignment she really wants. >> i guess she did what she had to do to get where she needed to get to. so -- >> and -- >> my best lawyer is me right now. >> the poore brothers face the judge and each other. enter homeowner, and ortho weed b gon max. kills weeds without harm
and it turns out she did because her best friend michelle wise was also in segregation. >> i'm like ifing, i might as well fight her anyway and go to seg. i knew michelle was down there. i would rather be where i know somebody. she encourages me to do well. it works. i listen to her. i don't listen to nobody but her. >> during the one hour she is allowed outside her cell, baker was able to visit with wise. but wise recently returned to general population. >> ready to go,...
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Apr 19, 2014
04/14
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. >> segregation is kind of rough.ou're on lockdown 23 hours a day. we just don't by default put you into protective custody. >> i was actually getting ready to release the inmate to be transferred to another pod. he came to me and said that he had some inmates that were making some threats towards him and the attacker saw the inmate in front of my security desk and that's when he said, okay, it's time to make my move. that's when i called code blue. >> not really a violent person, but there's no other way i could handle it. >> handle what? >> like the cho-mos. child molesters. everybody in the pod was plotting on getting him and nobody did nothing. i was passing right by him and he looked at me and something just took over in me and i hit him. >> rafael gonzalez who initiated the attack is awaiting trial on multiple charges, including aggravated assault and battery, to which he pled not guilty. >> i had to go do what i had to do. [ bleep ] needed to get his ass whooped. wasn't going to let the homie go by hisself. i r
. >> segregation is kind of rough.ou're on lockdown 23 hours a day. we just don't by default put you into protective custody. >> i was actually getting ready to release the inmate to be transferred to another pod. he came to me and said that he had some inmates that were making some threats towards him and the attacker saw the inmate in front of my security desk and that's when he said, okay, it's time to make my move. that's when i called code blue. >> not really a violent...
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Apr 24, 2014
04/14
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a report finds that school segregation in the united states is making an ugly comeback. documents say the latest in ukraine is pushing the united states and russia towards the biggest crisis sips the end of the cold war. in brazil - two months towards the world cup, the violence is getting worse. i'm david shuster, welcome to "consider this". here is more on what is ahead. . >> u.s. troops are now in poland exercises. >> we have approximately 130 soldiers here. >> we follow trucks the interests of the russians, if they are attacked we'll respond. americans are running the show. >> many of the claims in the interview are ludicrous. >> the death of a popular local figure sparked riots in brazil - less than two weeks before the world cup starts. >> it became so bad with rifle shooting. we hid under the bed. >> al jazeera's new series "borderland" takes you behind the debate. >> you are justifying reasons to build up a border. >> that has not been a good day for ukraine or the relationship between united states or russia. those developments in a moment. first, here at home.
a report finds that school segregation in the united states is making an ugly comeback. documents say the latest in ukraine is pushing the united states and russia towards the biggest crisis sips the end of the cold war. in brazil - two months towards the world cup, the violence is getting worse. i'm david shuster, welcome to "consider this". here is more on what is ahead. . >> u.s. troops are now in poland exercises. >> we have approximately 130 soldiers here. >> we...
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Apr 20, 2014
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a little bit of both. >> mm-hmm. >> sergeant collette runs the segregation unit.says he checks in with england and watts daily to make sure they're holding up emotionally. >> how you doing upstairs? you know what i'm saying? >> yeah, yeah. i'm good. >> okay. >> it's been great. >> all right. i'll get mental health in here to talk if you need to. >> i been good, sergeant collette. >> i've never really had any type of drastic mood change in alvin. alvin's always been alvin. he's just -- he's there. alvin's kind of a tricky one. those are the ones you really got to watch close for just very subtle changes. there may be things in their behavior or things in their cell that may be subtly changed. those are the ones you have to watch real close. >> all right, alvin. >> all right, sergeant collette. >> coming up -- five black people. shot them all down, killing three of them. >> alvin watts opens up. and -- >> why you got a toothbrush in your mouth? >> i was brushing my teeth at the same time. >> a case of bad hygiene leads to a pair of jailhouse assaults. ñ >>> with abo
a little bit of both. >> mm-hmm. >> sergeant collette runs the segregation unit.says he checks in with england and watts daily to make sure they're holding up emotionally. >> how you doing upstairs? you know what i'm saying? >> yeah, yeah. i'm good. >> okay. >> it's been great. >> all right. i'll get mental health in here to talk if you need to. >> i been good, sergeant collette. >> i've never really had any type of drastic mood change in...
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Apr 26, 2014
04/14
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new york city is one of the most highly segregated cities in the country.ee that reflected in the schools. and also frankly in the northeast and the midwest there's been very little political support behind efforts that would help to integrate these schools. >> in your reporting, are there ideas on how to reverse this trend? >> well, yeah. there's ways that you can do it. magnate programs. you can open up -- instead of drawing attendance zones around kind of very compact segregated schools, you can draw attendance zones that draw from both white areas and black areas. there's a lot of different ways that can be done. but i think the difficulty is mustering the political will to do so. >> how about the public will as well? the folks in alabama that you went and interviewed, nicole, how do they feel about this? how aware are they about this? how much do they want change? >> well, i would say political will is driven by public will. the public were crying out for integration in the schools, then that would happen. but that's not what -- at least the people who
new york city is one of the most highly segregated cities in the country.ee that reflected in the schools. and also frankly in the northeast and the midwest there's been very little political support behind efforts that would help to integrate these schools. >> in your reporting, are there ideas on how to reverse this trend? >> well, yeah. there's ways that you can do it. magnate programs. you can open up -- instead of drawing attendance zones around kind of very compact segregated...
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Apr 25, 2014
04/14
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been inaugurated governor with his famous speech, segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever. he talked about nothing but raise. 50 years ago in september this month, he flew to baltimore, my home city, and announced that he was going to run for president and never mentioned race but he never mentioned segregation again. he turned on a dime when the march on washington and those birmingham demonstrations made it obvious that in the future, overt segregation and talking overtly about race was no longer going to be respectable. he switched his message adroitly. he said he was running only to restore local government against big government by bureaucrats, to radical judges and tax-and-spend legislators. and that he had never denigrated the race of any person or group of people in history, and people wanted to believe it and that's the beginning of this remembered history and that's the beginning of the book category of modern politics. and if you don't believe that big government opposition today and that the notion that what makes me say -- safe and free as not all that
been inaugurated governor with his famous speech, segregation today, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever. he talked about nothing but raise. 50 years ago in september this month, he flew to baltimore, my home city, and announced that he was going to run for president and never mentioned race but he never mentioned segregation again. he turned on a dime when the march on washington and those birmingham demonstrations made it obvious that in the future, overt segregation and talking overtly...
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Apr 19, 2014
04/14
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now he has been moved into the segregation for fighting.it's not the first time with problems. >> brandon has a number of disciplinary issues. he's been put in seg for assault and possession of contraband. >> i was protecting myself. i'm not a violent person at all, though. but i know how to survive. >> and word of the son of jimmy maxwell is already beginning to spread. >> his son brandon is just as cool as he is. >> that's the next jimmy maxwell. >> he has not seen him since he was 16. >> he's about a quarter mile down the hallway. oddly enough, i feel closer to him. he's right down the street. >> i probably will never get to see him again. i might go to prison for a long time. and he -- he's going to go to prison for a long time and they're not going to let us be around each other. >> for now, the only way jimmy can see brandon is through a newspaper clipping about his current troubles. >> i don't have any pictures to be honest. that's the only picture i have. a mug shot. and it's not a very good mug shot, either. this is very sad. that'
now he has been moved into the segregation for fighting.it's not the first time with problems. >> brandon has a number of disciplinary issues. he's been put in seg for assault and possession of contraband. >> i was protecting myself. i'm not a violent person at all, though. but i know how to survive. >> and word of the son of jimmy maxwell is already beginning to spread. >> his son brandon is just as cool as he is. >> that's the next jimmy maxwell. >> he has...
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Apr 14, 2014
04/14
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but sometimes segregation can lead to the truth. >> have you been in any interaction with her? interaction? >> any type of writing interaction? >> writing, yes. >> screaming interaction? >> yeah. all what she said. >> how? >> writing interaction. screaming interaction. fighting interaction. touchy feely interaction. whatever. >> since the fight, you have been? >> what do you mean? >> have you had interaction with her since the fight? >> oh, no. i thought you meant when -- >> no. you just told all over on yourself. that's all you. >> well, i am in jail anyway. >> is she a special friend to you? >> oh, my god. a special, oh, my god. i like how you threw that in there. at that particular night i really didn't want to switch. i am being honest. i did not want to switch. but i took one for the team. that's all i am going to say. >> with your special friend. >> with my special friend. deputy flores. you know i think i became weak at one point. because she was like bragging abut her skills. so i wanted to test them. i feel like a sudden weight has been lifted off my shoulders. >> comi
but sometimes segregation can lead to the truth. >> have you been in any interaction with her? interaction? >> any type of writing interaction? >> writing, yes. >> screaming interaction? >> yeah. all what she said. >> how? >> writing interaction. screaming interaction. fighting interaction. touchy feely interaction. whatever. >> since the fight, you have been? >> what do you mean? >> have you had interaction with her since the fight?...
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Apr 6, 2014
04/14
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KPIX
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we discussed segregation. we discussed understanding and we discussed differences among the face and how we approach different issues it's hard to say 1 thing stands out. i hope we provided information to a community that they can use. >> and did you generate feedback. >> yes. >> did you get responses. >> yes, we did get responses. people were interested because at that time it was a pretty new idea and, of course, now, i see people are much more open to it. >> wonderful. back in that time, i'm sure that you had experiences with people that would approach you at different events recognizing the interface work that you did. what we would like to do when we come back from the break is talk a little bit more specifically about that interface work and how it has span add generation. you're watching mosaic, we'll be back right after this break. >>> the relationship between the various different faiths and various different religions. by the way, folks, she's here because she's going to be honored which christine wi
we discussed segregation. we discussed understanding and we discussed differences among the face and how we approach different issues it's hard to say 1 thing stands out. i hope we provided information to a community that they can use. >> and did you generate feedback. >> yes. >> did you get responses. >> yes, we did get responses. people were interested because at that time it was a pretty new idea and, of course, now, i see people are much more open to it. >>...
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Apr 27, 2014
04/14
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. >> this is the segregation unit. it houses murderers, drug dealers, thieves, all troublemakers. these women are locked in their 8x8 foot cells 23 hours a day. >> a lot of them complain that the walls are closing in on them, and that's why they're actually seen by mental health staff, you know, at least once, twice a week, sometimes once a month. >> sergeant tracy wright has been at the prison for ten years. she spent the past three working in the segregation unit. >> this particular inmate, she wants to go to mental health. she does this every weekend. she's wanting attention. >> when an inmate here acts out, the officers follow a strict protocol and take no chances. >> we basically take their things, because a lot of times, they'll take some of their personal items or some of the state-issued items and try to tie it around their neck and give the illusion that they might be trying to hang themselves. and some of the inmates even try. >> working in this area, it can be dangerous. we have had some assaults up here. a lot of the inmates up here are violent. >> once a day, the inma
. >> this is the segregation unit. it houses murderers, drug dealers, thieves, all troublemakers. these women are locked in their 8x8 foot cells 23 hours a day. >> a lot of them complain that the walls are closing in on them, and that's why they're actually seen by mental health staff, you know, at least once, twice a week, sometimes once a month. >> sergeant tracy wright has been at the prison for ten years. she spent the past three working in the segregation unit. >>...
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Apr 30, 2014
04/14
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KQEH
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any religion that had a segregated synagogue or segregated church is abominable to make, inexcusable. i never heard a defense of it. it never made any sense to me. and the waste of money and time and effort in racism is absurd. how anyone could think that in the year 2014 is beyond me. tavis: we will see -- >> how it all plays out. tavis: in the months and years to come. wem always troubled, when have these moments, there ought to be rich and ripe for the country to sink its teeth into, to have some real conversations about this issue, whether it is donald sterling or trayvon martin. we punt every time. it is therefore is to have a national conversation and we can't seem to get it together. >> what makes this conversation that 80% of the people employed are black. this is a white owner with a slave mentality. with wealthy blacks. we are not talking about the sharecropper son. we are talking about chris paul making $24 million. and their dilemma of i'm under contract to play for this guy, but -- so, that is what makes the story different from all other stories. tavis: you have no idea
any religion that had a segregated synagogue or segregated church is abominable to make, inexcusable. i never heard a defense of it. it never made any sense to me. and the waste of money and time and effort in racism is absurd. how anyone could think that in the year 2014 is beyond me. tavis: we will see -- >> how it all plays out. tavis: in the months and years to come. wem always troubled, when have these moments, there ought to be rich and ripe for the country to sink its teeth into,...
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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. >> he was recently confined to the segregation unit where he's locked in a single man cell 23 hours per day. jail surveillance footage shows why. >> he is down here and his accomplice is kind of walking around in the day room there. there was some form of disrespect the night before, and they were kind of waiting for this inmate to come out of his cell. and as soon as he comes out, the two of them begin an assault on him. one inmate throws a couple punches, he is definitely the aggressor. an officer doing a block check at the time uses his oc spray to get them to separate and orders them to get on the ground. >> he is an admitted gang member and has proven to be more violent on the streets. originally charged with first degree murder, pled guilty to second degree murder. hoping to receive a lesser sentence. he is eligible for 75 years in prison. >> i shot a man six times in the face. no matter how much of a gangster i am, what i think i am, i struggle with that say when i first got here. like i struggled with that for real. if i could go back, change some things, still would have sh
. >> he was recently confined to the segregation unit where he's locked in a single man cell 23 hours per day. jail surveillance footage shows why. >> he is down here and his accomplice is kind of walking around in the day room there. there was some form of disrespect the night before, and they were kind of waiting for this inmate to come out of his cell. and as soon as he comes out, the two of them begin an assault on him. one inmate throws a couple punches, he is definitely the...
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Apr 27, 2014
04/14
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. >> this is the segregation unit. it houses murderers, drug dealers, thieves, all troublemakers. these women are locked in their 8 x 8 foot cells 23 hours a day. >> a lot of them complain that the walls are closing in on them and that's why they're actually seen by mental health staff, at least once twice a week, sometimes once a month. >> sergeant tracy wright has been at the prison for ten years. she spent the past three working in the segregation unit. >> this particular inmate wants to go to mental health. she does this every weekend. she's wanting attention. >> when an inmate here acts out, the officers follow a strict protocol and take no chances. >> we basically take their things because a lot of times they'll take some of their personal items or some of the state-issued items and try to tie it around their neck give the illusion they might be trying to hang themselves and some of the inmates even try. working in this area it can be dangerous. we have had some assaults up here. a lot of the inmates up here are violent. >> once a day, the inmates are escorted outside to exe
. >> this is the segregation unit. it houses murderers, drug dealers, thieves, all troublemakers. these women are locked in their 8 x 8 foot cells 23 hours a day. >> a lot of them complain that the walls are closing in on them and that's why they're actually seen by mental health staff, at least once twice a week, sometimes once a month. >> sergeant tracy wright has been at the prison for ten years. she spent the past three working in the segregation unit. >> this...
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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and the issue is no one has dared touch the shrew of segregation.ecretary to say wait, this is an issue. some of hud's own policies play a key role in making the problem continue to exist. this hud secretary is taking on issues in his own backyard. he looked at segregation policies in new york and said this is a problem. we're going cocombat that. right now he's taking on issues in dubuque, iowa. right now there's certainly a lot more he can do. i'm a person who not only pushes him to do more. i've sued his administration to push him to do more. but at the same time, this is the most we've seen out of any hud secretary in decades. >> as we were pulling together this conversation, the one that we've been wanting to have for a while, we up in nerd land were saying we have our bad story in louisiana. we have a good story in oak park. it's always a mixed story at the the federal government level, and then we read your report, and i'm telling you there was wails and sadness in nerd land. . we have to perfect this. what are the right policies to create in
and the issue is no one has dared touch the shrew of segregation.ecretary to say wait, this is an issue. some of hud's own policies play a key role in making the problem continue to exist. this hud secretary is taking on issues in his own backyard. he looked at segregation policies in new york and said this is a problem. we're going cocombat that. right now he's taking on issues in dubuque, iowa. right now there's certainly a lot more he can do. i'm a person who not only pushes him to do more....
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Apr 30, 2014
04/14
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in society, that was segregated, the game of basketball was also segregated. they were called black five's, negro fives, and we thought that it was true to the history but also designate -- resonated today. >> historic society has a .istory of segregation spans from when asked about was introduced to african-americans for the first time in a ghost all the way to 1950, which is when the nba became racially integrated. >> people do not understand history. they think it is just one general progression and there are no general side trips. sometimes the side trips are more important than the general progression. in the case of the black fives and the case of sports and civil rights and how these things became combined, it is extraordinarily important. becamer league baseball integrated with jackie robinson, but black teams and white teams in basketball were playing each other even before 1910, and they played each other through the of0s, so this idea integration actually started and was pioneered in basketball ever before it got to baseball. the reason i was able t
in society, that was segregated, the game of basketball was also segregated. they were called black five's, negro fives, and we thought that it was true to the history but also designate -- resonated today. >> historic society has a .istory of segregation spans from when asked about was introduced to african-americans for the first time in a ghost all the way to 1950, which is when the nba became racially integrated. >> people do not understand history. they think it is just one...
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Apr 5, 2014
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>> for starting the fight verlander may receive time in segregation. his membership in the white supremacist gang the aryan brotherhood he insists race played no role in the fight. >> i'm not a racist person. i don't believe in racial ideology. i believe that races should be separated amongst themselves, in which case they are in our society. i don't hate nobody. if i hate you then i'm probably going to try to kill you. and there's probably a pretty [ bleep ] good reason why i'm trying to kill you. >> verlander was placed in a temporary cooldown cell for 24 hours. now he is back in his own cell with his cellmate, shawn osborne. ♪ i know that you've been feeling me all this time ♪ ♪ we know it's all been okay but today we're going to say whatever is on our mind ♪ >> he pops off. he's got lyrics that just come out of his head that just flow. ♪ a little saxophone. >> you know what i mean? >> see, we're not allowed to have this either. >> verlander's high energy level hasn't gotten to osborne, but verlander has gotten word that his actions -- >> [ bleep ].
>> for starting the fight verlander may receive time in segregation. his membership in the white supremacist gang the aryan brotherhood he insists race played no role in the fight. >> i'm not a racist person. i don't believe in racial ideology. i believe that races should be separated amongst themselves, in which case they are in our society. i don't hate nobody. if i hate you then i'm probably going to try to kill you. and there's probably a pretty [ bleep ] good reason why i'm...
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Apr 13, 2014
04/14
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over in the men's segregation unit, 18-year-old tony goodwin is dealing with much bigger issues. he's currently on trial for murder. >> my judge told me if i were to lose trial my minimum sentence would be 23 to life and maximum 33 to life. >> goodwin, who was 16 at the time of his arrest, is accused of fatally shooting a 20-year-old man. >> i'm nervous. i was -- basically i want to speak from the heart to the victim's family, whatever part i played in this situation, i really apologize for it and i want them to know i'm sincere about it. >> i have to ask you then, what are you sorry for? >> the part that i did play in this case. >> do you want to tell me what that was? >> no. >> does tony know? >> i know what i'm guilty of. >> 18 months before his own arrest, goodwin's older brother was fatally shot while standing at a bus stop. >> people take losses different ways. some people find god, religion, family. i chose the streets. i went to the streets when i lost my brother. some people do things different. the streets helped me cope, i guess, the pain i was feeling. >> goodwin has
over in the men's segregation unit, 18-year-old tony goodwin is dealing with much bigger issues. he's currently on trial for murder. >> my judge told me if i were to lose trial my minimum sentence would be 23 to life and maximum 33 to life. >> goodwin, who was 16 at the time of his arrest, is accused of fatally shooting a 20-year-old man. >> i'm nervous. i was -- basically i want to speak from the heart to the victim's family, whatever part i played in this situation, i really...
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Apr 23, 2014
04/14
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the district court found that there was de jure segregation? >> that is not correct. >> it didn't? >> there was -- there was no finding whatsoever that there had been de jure segregation and that there was a constitutional imperative to correct that desegregation. it was an absolutely identical situation. and regarding the accountability, your honor is correct that in seattle what we were dealing with was an elected school board and here, as the michigan brief says, as the wayne state brief says, as the court specifically found at pages 326a and 327a of the record, this is a political process in which the regents were elected, have at all times maintained plenary authority over the admissions process itself, and that -- >> well, there are two things. number one is it delegated to the faculty. and number two, they're elected only rarely and in staggered term. >> that is no question that that's correct, your honor. but the ordinary process itself is a politically accountable process. that's what the district court found when it looked at how the
the district court found that there was de jure segregation? >> that is not correct. >> it didn't? >> there was -- there was no finding whatsoever that there had been de jure segregation and that there was a constitutional imperative to correct that desegregation. it was an absolutely identical situation. and regarding the accountability, your honor is correct that in seattle what we were dealing with was an elected school board and here, as the michigan brief says, as the...
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Apr 3, 2014
04/14
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you have to at least understand that it is morally wrong for this country to sanction jim crow segregationd this, over time, really pushed people, especially when they saw the settlers -- the southerners stonewalled. there is no mind, greater coalition of americans that push to get the civil rights bill passed. i have seen nothing like it since. it is a one-of-a-kind coalition, and yet it happened in an america that was pretty starkly divided between black and white, and now here we are in the most multicultural, multiracial, altiethnic america ever, with black man sitting in the oval office, and that might be part of the problem, push back here, but we cannot get anything comprehensive push through this congress even though in 1964 they did remarkably well. >> well, i would say that one of the things that we face today is that people learned lessons of that time, so, yes, you have a lot of pro-immigration reform activists, but you also have a team reform and an anti-immigration reform. i do not want to say just the tea party, who have learned the same lesson, and they are pushing in the o
you have to at least understand that it is morally wrong for this country to sanction jim crow segregationd this, over time, really pushed people, especially when they saw the settlers -- the southerners stonewalled. there is no mind, greater coalition of americans that push to get the civil rights bill passed. i have seen nothing like it since. it is a one-of-a-kind coalition, and yet it happened in an america that was pretty starkly divided between black and white, and now here we are in the...
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Apr 10, 2014
04/14
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also our lgbt groups fighting for tempted to call the soul why are you advocating post mortem segregation to the subpoena association. i guess has the right to do this is the idea that is the amazing combination of stupid pointless and hypocritical all same time makes the dumb segregation for the mortal world please. just acting for all. what. the and today she too has some very old and new. over time. cousins has a very open space the chinese. this is a film reviews and acupuncture points to belt up the cheese thousands of years. center the chinese. the children there are a little prouder there are chinese medicine over to japan in august essentially the japanese them destitute. home style killing so then. it also has a maximum two hundred years is this century. and on the gentleman who made it we've known this example she and the few open up his first christian school in nineteen twenty. he says. what you call justin was based on that impressed. his students must not. call centers yes two which includes one stretching then this is more than just the pressure comes with just twenty four.
also our lgbt groups fighting for tempted to call the soul why are you advocating post mortem segregation to the subpoena association. i guess has the right to do this is the idea that is the amazing combination of stupid pointless and hypocritical all same time makes the dumb segregation for the mortal world please. just acting for all. what. the and today she too has some very old and new. over time. cousins has a very open space the chinese. this is a film reviews and acupuncture points to...
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Apr 12, 2014
04/14
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let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please precious acting. i am the book soon. henne has it that you wish. in many of these seats about forty years of age. ninety six to five. i am a sahm to two. i was going on fourteen if i made myself and i was fourteen i wouldn't recognize. this of course that person today is the same was fun and i read the slides normal for all to read and see what i know everything about the main character of long beach. no these guys could be the same golf. when the apostle team tuesday what really makes you will be interesting is the fact that these changes. you will be the same tomorrow us don't so i tried really tried to wake him to prove to be in the team to conduct a life changing. no only giving you the deceased's to changing opinions of all things but in all circumstance. crowe will last a living person. i believe this one c to twenty years becomes pope. i fear the cops. we are. it all. i can't do that. he said. what is called the views the home it's not use the v c in the inquest in another direction and in use them the same vintag
let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please precious acting. i am the book soon. henne has it that you wish. in many of these seats about forty years of age. ninety six to five. i am a sahm to two. i was going on fourteen if i made myself and i was fourteen i wouldn't recognize. this of course that person today is the same was fun and i read the slides normal for all to read and see what i know everything about the main character of long beach. no these guys could be the same golf....
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Apr 20, 2014
04/14
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instead they've kept him locked up in segregation. >> my beard represents how long i've been here. long my hair is, that's how long i've been down here. >> but lately paul has ceased his escape attempts and given himself a new look. because of his good behavior, jail officials have moved him to a less restrictive housing unit. >> everybody thought that there's no way we're going to change his behavior. and to see him today, he's a totally different person. even to speak and communicate with. he's not the same person that we initially had when he first came in. i think actually one of the real breaking points was getting him to communicate with staff and his family members. for a long time he wasn't communicating with anybody, and we ended up when he was in administrative seg, getting it to where he was able to have visits with his family, and that really seemed to be the turning point. things started changing. he was no longer attempting some of those negative behaviors we were seeing earlier. >> i'm getting ready to do a visit. that's the highlight of the week. so to speak. >> 2:0
instead they've kept him locked up in segregation. >> my beard represents how long i've been here. long my hair is, that's how long i've been down here. >> but lately paul has ceased his escape attempts and given himself a new look. because of his good behavior, jail officials have moved him to a less restrictive housing unit. >> everybody thought that there's no way we're going to change his behavior. and to see him today, he's a totally different person. even to speak and...
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Apr 13, 2014
04/14
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let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please precious acting. world the world's biggest story each day exclusive any c networks. the top story to end today's most intriguing topic as told but it makes the premier global content partners back to back in english. it's one am in washington. enlightenment you are never lacking here in philly this weekend is here right from the event. i can't get that stealing checks to new and in a g networks to work in the tea dance on tv will continue to share with your friends on facebook and twitter the top story on the m a c networks when mdm moving with the team. i was. salinas line and i intend to. in nineteen seven point six earthquake struck near the sa mundine and spend a sunday morning local time but no damage was to pull it as the pacific tsunami warning center has now lifted its left office on my mind as funny on tv and pop by new guinea. the last year our schools sensei says the quake struck and twenty fifteen utc on saturday the focus was thirty three km below the seabed the pacific tsunami warning ce
let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please precious acting. world the world's biggest story each day exclusive any c networks. the top story to end today's most intriguing topic as told but it makes the premier global content partners back to back in english. it's one am in washington. enlightenment you are never lacking here in philly this weekend is here right from the event. i can't get that stealing checks to new and in a g networks to work in the tea dance on tv will continue...
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Apr 11, 2014
04/14
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let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please. just acting. for all.i made a dent in the us and russia moscow at work and all but i think that the most prominent independent and well known russian newspaper in the west on. weeks. beaches. i did chris went and did what i can see me in the acting was taken on so to save fuel. my organization is the speaker in the inquiry's most men than the one in my country to know what this was hers. i was not a lot of people asking. they open casket at the question of my soul so many young people and what do you use paper and also the month of course wanted to use a little to no hot spots in their actions. aah. indeed they say that the wii. it doesn't matter. we want jenny says he doesn't update bills don't just seemed to know but is it that because they felt that its right place to wear it. to all the right place to go up ami she did it offers a journalist and a bit curious in a baby show. i can't stand the man thought to be curious not to to be curious to ask questions. to try to understand what's going on don't be
let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please. just acting. for all.i made a dent in the us and russia moscow at work and all but i think that the most prominent independent and well known russian newspaper in the west on. weeks. beaches. i did chris went and did what i can see me in the acting was taken on so to save fuel. my organization is the speaker in the inquiry's most men than the one in my country to know what this was hers. i was not a lot of people asking. they open casket...
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Apr 26, 2014
04/14
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in maurice's case, six months in the segregation unit, also known as "i" house. here inmates are given hard time. time that's added on to their sentence. it's also considered hard time because of the harsh conditions and severe restrictions that accompany time in "i" house. officer loquita younger is one of the correctional officers assigned to the segregation unit. >> basically, this is where the bad people for being extra bad in the facility come to be locked up. >> a walk-through one of "i" house's wards quickly reveals how different it is from the general population unit. this is stateville's version of solitary confinement. >> how y'all doing? >> markers indicating dangerous inmates fill the ward as does an overwhelming stench. >> it's a stripped cell, so they don't have on any clothes or very little clothes. they urinate, bowel movement everywhere. >> can you tell us what that is? >> it's feces. spreads it on everything. clean it off every day. every day, he puts it right back on. >> i think they just kind of crazy. kind of the prison life is probably getti
in maurice's case, six months in the segregation unit, also known as "i" house. here inmates are given hard time. time that's added on to their sentence. it's also considered hard time because of the harsh conditions and severe restrictions that accompany time in "i" house. officer loquita younger is one of the correctional officers assigned to the segregation unit. >> basically, this is where the bad people for being extra bad in the facility come to be locked up....
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Apr 25, 2014
04/14
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ALJAZAM
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netanyahu is the one preferring illegal settlements to international law of peace and preferring segregation to having peace. before this agreement was concluded between plo and hamas israel used to say that it could not make peace with palestinians because there was not a palestinian leader who represent all palestinians because of the division. now that we have managed to have a possibility of unifying the palestinian system, israelis are now saying they can't make peace. what do they want? do they want for us to remain divided so we remain weak and so peace could not be achieved. >> we're going to take a short break. when we come back we'll talk about whether sides that are still so clearly divided really have that much to talk about, and what the american role in brokering a future peace might look like and what it has looked like in the near past. this is inside story. >> welcome back to "inside story." i'm ray suarez. the two main factions will come together in the next five weeks. this break through in palestinian politics kept the peace talks from going forward, competing interests,
netanyahu is the one preferring illegal settlements to international law of peace and preferring segregation to having peace. before this agreement was concluded between plo and hamas israel used to say that it could not make peace with palestinians because there was not a palestinian leader who represent all palestinians because of the division. now that we have managed to have a possibility of unifying the palestinian system, israelis are now saying they can't make peace. what do they want?...
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Apr 6, 2014
04/14
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at bexar county jail he's segregated with members of his gang. in prison he could be exposed to his gang's archrivals, the texas mexican mafia and that is a conflict in more ways than one. >> the alonzos are a large family with in the mexican mafia, three or four brothers with in the alonzos all mexican mafia. >> in addition, alonzo's grandfather is reputed to be one of the texas mexican mafia's founders and current leaders. >> i didn't want to be a part of that organization, because there's things you got to do and i wouldn't want anybody to tell me what to do. say there is a hit you got to do and maybe it's on your brother whatever, and you got to do it or it's on you next. it's not for me, wasn't for me. i don't like their style. >> alonzo's gang, the tango orejones splintered in the 1990s, since then they have become enemies, but family ties like alonzo's have probably helped reduce the bloodshed. >> always rumored about the two groups, when will there be war, when will it carry into the streets, when will the bloodbath begin? i remembered as
at bexar county jail he's segregated with members of his gang. in prison he could be exposed to his gang's archrivals, the texas mexican mafia and that is a conflict in more ways than one. >> the alonzos are a large family with in the mexican mafia, three or four brothers with in the alonzos all mexican mafia. >> in addition, alonzo's grandfather is reputed to be one of the texas mexican mafia's founders and current leaders. >> i didn't want to be a part of that organization,...
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Apr 14, 2014
04/14
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will all finally the equals but that is our spirits so we are corpses will still be very much so segregatedspecially at the new cemetery in germany you probably think oh no some neo group must have their own cemetery with most men the turkish immigrants but no it isn't all it's been great guard according to time magazine is the four hundred square meter chunk of blue corn burial plots has been set aside for homosexual in a group of elderly lesbians call this a p association let's take a deep breath and think about just why in our modern age do we need to buy corpses by their former sexual preference. if a funeral for street person and all the second person happened on the same day at the same graveyard of the universe explode or something. also our lgbt groups fighting for acceptance and equality soul why are you advocating post mortem segregation to the subpoena association. i guess has the right to do this. what is the idea that is the amazing combination of stupid pointless and hypocritical all the same time makes leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please. precious acting for al
will all finally the equals but that is our spirits so we are corpses will still be very much so segregatedspecially at the new cemetery in germany you probably think oh no some neo group must have their own cemetery with most men the turkish immigrants but no it isn't all it's been great guard according to time magazine is the four hundred square meter chunk of blue corn burial plots has been set aside for homosexual in a group of elderly lesbians call this a p association let's take a deep...
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Apr 11, 2014
04/14
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KCSM
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let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please. just acting. our room. new new the book said. having as it did. in many of these seats about forty years of age ninety six to five. msf two two. i was going on fourteen if i made myself and i was fourteen i wouldn't recognize this of course that person today is the same spot on. i read the slides. normal for all to read and see what i know everything about them and cut it off when did she know these guys could be the same though. one cup of tea. what really makes you will be interesting is the fact that these changes you will be the same tomorrow us don't. so i'm trying really trying to wade into couldn't get his team to conduct a life changing. no only giving you the deceased's to changing opinions of all things but in all circumstance. crowe will last a living person. i believe this one c to twenty years becomes pope. i fear the cops. goal. i can't do that. he said. well we go to school in his home. it's not use the b c and e and quite another direction and in use them. the same vintage. this mole in the
let's leave dumb segregation for the mortal world please. just acting. our room. new new the book said. having as it did. in many of these seats about forty years of age ninety six to five. msf two two. i was going on fourteen if i made myself and i was fourteen i wouldn't recognize this of course that person today is the same spot on. i read the slides. normal for all to read and see what i know everything about them and cut it off when did she know these guys could be the same though. one cup...
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Apr 14, 2014
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founders and slavery in the constitution and look at most of the history of the country where legal segregation was the law you say well that's wrong but change was needed but in most of the areas you don't embrace change and you don't embrace the idea of us working as a community to improve the quality of all of our lives. >> guest: let me touch on one thing you said about the founders. not all of them owned slaves and not all of them were for slavery but like mr. lincoln said 100 years later, if it required preserving slavery in order to save the union he was in favor of preserving slavery. if emancipation preserving union he would be for emancipation. the founders as you know from studying history were at a moment and this wasn't the only issue. there was the power of the states and federal us. so there are compromises. but look, dr. king referred and so did lincoln, referred back to those founding documents particular the greatest phrase ever written about human freedom. all men are created equal and endowed by their creator. they understood that rights in order to be protected from governm
founders and slavery in the constitution and look at most of the history of the country where legal segregation was the law you say well that's wrong but change was needed but in most of the areas you don't embrace change and you don't embrace the idea of us working as a community to improve the quality of all of our lives. >> guest: let me touch on one thing you said about the founders. not all of them owned slaves and not all of them were for slavery but like mr. lincoln said 100 years...