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Sep 19, 2020
09/20
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when he came down to selma.t money from the sclc and their donors who were able to get people bailed out of jail. he also brought motivation. when you have a figure like dr. king come into a small city like selma, he had been already seen as someone who could lead the masses, who could speak so eloquently and inspire people, so he brought a lot of motivation with him and that was the inspiration for a lot of adults to get involved with the movement. he also brought the media. and the media is what really put the nail in the coffin for the voting rights movement here. they were able to show that even though these protesters were nonviolent, and they were only practicing civil disobedience, they were still being mistreated because of sheriff clark's attitude toward them. so we have made our way from brown chapel ame church over here to the edmund pettus bridge, which is a movement that african-american protesters here in selma during the voting rights movement would have made three separate times. the first is wha
when he came down to selma.t money from the sclc and their donors who were able to get people bailed out of jail. he also brought motivation. when you have a figure like dr. king come into a small city like selma, he had been already seen as someone who could lead the masses, who could speak so eloquently and inspire people, so he brought a lot of motivation with him and that was the inspiration for a lot of adults to get involved with the movement. he also brought the media. and the media is...
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Sep 5, 2020
09/20
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king: thousands of us started on a mighty walk from selma, alabama.s we would not get here. said were those who would get here over their dead bodies. well, all the world today knows that we are here, and that we are standing before the four sin s of power in the state of alabama, saying, "we going to let nobody turn us around." [laughter] the voting rights act was signed, ensuring that african americans would be granted the right to vote, and this march was the direct cause for african americans having the right to , so this was the realization of the desire for african americans to have the right to vote for over 100 years, since the and of reconstruction. ♪ god bless you. from selma and civil rights in 1965, we travel back 100 years to virginia and the end of the civil war. appomattox house national preserves the place where property lee surrendered to you and s grant -- surrendered -- where robert e ulyssusrendered to you as gr s grant. the villages situated in the appomattox courthouse, two words, which is the village. generallyplace where you su
king: thousands of us started on a mighty walk from selma, alabama.s we would not get here. said were those who would get here over their dead bodies. well, all the world today knows that we are here, and that we are standing before the four sin s of power in the state of alabama, saying, "we going to let nobody turn us around." [laughter] the voting rights act was signed, ensuring that african americans would be granted the right to vote, and this march was the direct cause for...
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Sep 8, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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king brought three things when he came down to selma.nd the donors who are able to help get a lot of people bailed out of jeffrey also brought motivation to we have a big deal at dr. king coming to a small city like selma, he's been over since someone who lead the masses, who can speak so eloquently and inspire people. he brought a lot of motivation within and that was in desperation for a lot of adults to get involved with the movement. he also brought the media, and the media is what put the nail in the coffin for the voting rights movement here. they were able to show that even though these protesters were nonviolent and it only practicing civil disobedience, they were still being mistreated because of the attitude towards them. so we had made our way from brown chapel ame church over here to the edmund pettus bridge which is a movement that african-american protesters in selma during the voting rights movement would have made three separate times. the first is known as bloody sunday. sunday march 7, 1965, about 6 or protesters gather
king brought three things when he came down to selma.nd the donors who are able to help get a lot of people bailed out of jeffrey also brought motivation to we have a big deal at dr. king coming to a small city like selma, he's been over since someone who lead the masses, who can speak so eloquently and inspire people. he brought a lot of motivation within and that was in desperation for a lot of adults to get involved with the movement. he also brought the media, and the media is what put the...
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN3
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we have a big figure like doctor king coming to a small city like selma.already been seen as someone who can lead the masses, speak so eloquently and inspire people so, he brought a lot of motivation with them. and that was a lot of inspiration for a lot of adults to be involved in the movement. and also brought in the media. and it was the media the probably put the nail in the coffin for the voting rights movement. it was evil they were able to show that even though these protesters were not violent, they were still being mistreated because of sheriff clark's attitude towards this. so we have made our way from the church over to the edmund paris bridge which is a movement that african americans here in selma during the voting rights movement would've made separate times. the first was what we know is bloody sunday. march 7th of 1965 about 600 protesters actually gather right at the chapel in a played on area in order to get their wits about them and be prepared to go all the way from selma to montgomery. now how did they get the idea to have a sars a cha
we have a big figure like doctor king coming to a small city like selma.already been seen as someone who can lead the masses, speak so eloquently and inspire people so, he brought a lot of motivation with them. and that was a lot of inspiration for a lot of adults to be involved in the movement. and also brought in the media. and it was the media the probably put the nail in the coffin for the voting rights movement. it was evil they were able to show that even though these protesters were not...
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Sep 5, 2020
09/20
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number one, selma is only 40-50 miles from montgomery. i grew up in selma at the time of the march. my question is for mr. carter. at the time of the march, rumors were running rampant. a woman was giving marchers a ride back in her car when she was ambushed. it was rumored for many years that one of the marchers she was giving eight ride was an undercover fbi agent. i wonder if you have ever heard of this rumor. >> it was not her passenger, it was one of the individuals in the car that did the shooting was an undercover agent it was his testimony that made it possible for the immediate arrest of the people who did the shooting even though nothing much came of it. that was the situation. the person she was taking back, and i am embarrassed to say i have forgotten his name, faced being shot. he fell under her when she was shot. the car wreck and she fell on top of him. he was covered in blood. they stopped and realized she was dead at thought he was, to. >> in your book "the politics of rage," there is a discussion about potential conspiracies with the nixon campaign to have shot gov
number one, selma is only 40-50 miles from montgomery. i grew up in selma at the time of the march. my question is for mr. carter. at the time of the march, rumors were running rampant. a woman was giving marchers a ride back in her car when she was ambushed. it was rumored for many years that one of the marchers she was giving eight ride was an undercover fbi agent. i wonder if you have ever heard of this rumor. >> it was not her passenger, it was one of the individuals in the car that...
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Sep 28, 2020
09/20
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CNNW
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you keep going. >> the monday after bloody sunday, after we were beaten in selma, dr.>> the events in selma have come to a climax by a nighttime attack on a white boston minister by white men. he died two days later. >> president lyndon johnson spoke to the nation. >> it's not just negroes but really it's all of us who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. >> and we shall overcome. >> the first time an american president quoted the words of the theme song of the movement. >> i don't know if i could participate in the march today but it is my feeling that people all over this country, particularly the people right here in alabama, right here in selma, should continue to march toward montgomery. ♪ ♪ turn me around ♪ turn me around ♪ ain't going to let nobody turn me around, turn me around ♪ ♪ ain't going to let nobody turn me around ♪ ♪ ain't going to let nobody turn me around ♪ ♪ ain't going to let nobody turn me around ♪ ♪ can't let them turn me around ♪ ♪ ain't going to let nobody turn me around ♪ ♪ just keep on walking, i keep on talking ♪ >> w
you keep going. >> the monday after bloody sunday, after we were beaten in selma, dr.>> the events in selma have come to a climax by a nighttime attack on a white boston minister by white men. he died two days later. >> president lyndon johnson spoke to the nation. >> it's not just negroes but really it's all of us who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. >> and we shall overcome. >> the first time an american president quoted the...
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Sep 28, 2020
09/20
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CNNW
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you keep going. >> the monday after bloody sunday, after we were beaten in selma, dr.aders to come. >> the events in selma have come to a chime action of an attack on a black continue sister by white men. he died two days later. >> president lyndon johnson spoke to the nation. >> it's not just negroes but really it's all of us who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. >> and we shall overcome. >> the first time a president quoted it. >> i don't know if i could participate in the march today but it is my feeling that people all over this country, particularly riot here in selma, should continue the march. ♪ ♪ turn me around ♪ turn me around ♪ gonna let nobody turn me around 99 i just keep on walking ♪ ♪ keep on talking ♪ marching on the rio grande ♪ ain't gonna let nobody turn me around ♪ ♪ turn me around ♪ ain't going to let nobody turn me around ♪ ♪ i just keep walking ♪ i keep -- >> trials and tribulations. when we cross the city line tomorrow, we have a new song that we're going to sing. we have overcome. ♪ i keep on walking ♪ keep on talking
you keep going. >> the monday after bloody sunday, after we were beaten in selma, dr.aders to come. >> the events in selma have come to a chime action of an attack on a black continue sister by white men. he died two days later. >> president lyndon johnson spoke to the nation. >> it's not just negroes but really it's all of us who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. >> and we shall overcome. >> the first time a president quoted it....
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Sep 7, 2020
09/20
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then, on march 7th, 1965 in selma, alabama -- >> this march will not continue. >> bloody sunday.ee-day peaceful march turned violent. police attacked marchers on the edmund pettus bridge, injuring dozens, sending 17 to the hospital. ♪ months later, major turning point in the fight. the passage of the voting rights act. >> every american citizen must have an equal right to vote. >> signed by president johnson, the act outlawed poll taxes, literacy tests, and other tactics of suppression. 55 years later in 2013 the supreme court struck down a key provision of the act concerning federal preapproval for election laws. nine states wasted no time changing their voting rules. >> two hours after the supreme court gutted the voting rights act, texas implemented its voter i.d. law that multiple courts have found to be racially discriminatory. within a few months, alabama implements its voter i.d. law. these legislators wrote the law based on the types of i.d.s that african-americans disproportionately did not have. what we're seeing now is massive voting suppression in the 2016 election, t
then, on march 7th, 1965 in selma, alabama -- >> this march will not continue. >> bloody sunday.ee-day peaceful march turned violent. police attacked marchers on the edmund pettus bridge, injuring dozens, sending 17 to the hospital. ♪ months later, major turning point in the fight. the passage of the voting rights act. >> every american citizen must have an equal right to vote. >> signed by president johnson, the act outlawed poll taxes, literacy tests, and other...
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Sep 27, 2020
09/20
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selma, it was very to my astonishment i discovered my own racism.ad no idea. that made me understand how hard it is for people to really uncover and know what they are working with within themselves. my question for you is, john lewis has written a couple of wonderful books about himself and his growing up and his two wonderful autobiographies. what prompted you as a writer to want to write a biography of him, given that he's written a couple of wonderful books about himself. >> you are absolutely right. that's a fascinating and honest observation you open with. walking with the wind is a marvelous book, everybody should get it. 1998 it was his big memoir, he did the march trilogy and others. i wanted to offer my opinion. my opinion was that john lewis embodied the best possible utility, the most advantageous utility of what a genuine adherence to the christian gospel could do in america. i wanted to do it because he and i are fellow southerners but we come from radically different generations and radically different backgrounds. on a white male sou
selma, it was very to my astonishment i discovered my own racism.ad no idea. that made me understand how hard it is for people to really uncover and know what they are working with within themselves. my question for you is, john lewis has written a couple of wonderful books about himself and his growing up and his two wonderful autobiographies. what prompted you as a writer to want to write a biography of him, given that he's written a couple of wonderful books about himself. >> you are...
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Sep 27, 2020
09/20
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he was on the bridge in selma because of faith. he was on the buses for the freedom rides because of faith. a faith in god and the new testament vision of the world. and a faith in america. he did not believe the country is fundamentally correct and redeemable any more so than any individual person is beyond redemption. he did the real work to sacrifice his blood and life. that is immensely important. it is not a fable but a story of a member of congress whose library is called the library of congress, who is fast still. will engage these stories were told the stories then history risks becoming and arena of ideological contention were to seem irrelevant and remote . . . . but if one person can do it then we all have the capacity to do it. [instrumental music] >> joining us live from his home is pulitzer prize-winning biographer trim tom, his most recent book he was just assessing up a national book festival is "his truth is marching on: john lewis and the power of
he was on the bridge in selma because of faith. he was on the buses for the freedom rides because of faith. a faith in god and the new testament vision of the world. and a faith in america. he did not believe the country is fundamentally correct and redeemable any more so than any individual person is beyond redemption. he did the real work to sacrifice his blood and life. that is immensely important. it is not a fable but a story of a member of congress whose library is called the library of...
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Sep 27, 2020
09/20
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CNNW
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. >> and we heard that from him in his last visit to selma.roes of his fight of pancreatic cancer, and he made it to selma as he has done every year for more than 50 years and he reminded people the importance of the vote, and then here he was, during the anniversary of selma, marching with kamala harris, nancy pelosi. let's look at one more clip from this documentary. >> i hated the system telling people that you cannot be seated at a lunch counter. you cannot go into a restaurant simply because of the color of your skin. and i wanted to be part of an effort to help change it and i was prepared to put my body on the line. something deep down within me, moving me, that i could no longer be satisfied or go along with an evil system. >> wow. rosa, he explains it well there, justifying what motivated him. it's just remarkable, as a teenager, he would have the gall really, you know, to write dr. martin luther king and then to actually be invited to join, and that he did. i mean you know as we all try to figure out what is it about him that made hi
. >> and we heard that from him in his last visit to selma.roes of his fight of pancreatic cancer, and he made it to selma as he has done every year for more than 50 years and he reminded people the importance of the vote, and then here he was, during the anniversary of selma, marching with kamala harris, nancy pelosi. let's look at one more clip from this documentary. >> i hated the system telling people that you cannot be seated at a lunch counter. you cannot go into a restaurant...
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Sep 28, 2020
09/20
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turned me into a historian and milwaukee was segregated for those areas of the city we call that the selma of the north and that has had an impact on me politically also as a historian and wisconsin and also my dad was a small businessman and those of the goldwater movement of the sixties and i was fascinated by and the child is the father to the man i am proud to be a midwesterner and i'm proud to be in chicago. >> did i mispronounce your city go ahead with your question. >>caller: the question i have is since the seventies in the role of again regulars on - - revolution is basically the same and the election of donald trump is just anger over the population for now he has gone into office you have seen why one - - lied. you said a fascist he has no underlying radiology one - - ideology. it is all about me. i was a republican but i changed my affiliation but i hope somebody else gets into office otherwise this is the end of the. >> thank you. >>guest: there is a new book it looks wonderful it is called strongman and it shows that fascist dictators careen from place to place and then i wan
turned me into a historian and milwaukee was segregated for those areas of the city we call that the selma of the north and that has had an impact on me politically also as a historian and wisconsin and also my dad was a small businessman and those of the goldwater movement of the sixties and i was fascinated by and the child is the father to the man i am proud to be a midwesterner and i'm proud to be in chicago. >> did i mispronounce your city go ahead with your question. >>caller:...
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Sep 5, 2020
09/20
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after the bloody sunday selma marches, dr. king spoke about this specifically, saying, we're here to say to the white men we no longer will let them use clubs on us in the dark corners. we're going to make them do it in the glaring light of television, which required pressing national outlets in the northern, largely white press to put it on television. >> with me in the studio is the reverend ralph abernathy, who has just come from conducting this evening's march in selma. dr. abernathy is dr. martin luther king's second in command. partly on the sidewalk immediately in front of the white house. >> governor, last night you commended the people of alabama, for restraint during the march. and last night a white civil rights worker was killed. how do you feel about it this morning? >> of course i feel badly. >> many black leaders at the time called out the press for its complicit in disappearing the facts and the horror. then there were artists like gill scott-heron who would go on to say the revolution will not be televised and
after the bloody sunday selma marches, dr. king spoke about this specifically, saying, we're here to say to the white men we no longer will let them use clubs on us in the dark corners. we're going to make them do it in the glaring light of television, which required pressing national outlets in the northern, largely white press to put it on television. >> with me in the studio is the reverend ralph abernathy, who has just come from conducting this evening's march in selma. dr. abernathy...
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Sep 16, 2020
09/20
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BBCNEWS
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selma's remarkable story has now been written down in her memoir "my name is selma."ficult to remove. it was installed on an industrial scale, it has been removed. 120 tonnes of this stuff has stopped this river being so fast flowing, now as you can see it is calmer, we have been watching fish jumping out of the pond beside us, so it wasn'tjust jumping out of the pond beside us, so it wasn't just aboutst tick, the way it looked, it has been about protecting the environment and making it much more welcoming for nature. making it much more welcoming for nature. the natural beauty of this meandering river, but things months ago, things looked very different. the river keekle held a dark secret — reams of black plastic liner had been installed 20 years ago to stop pollution seeping into the water from a nearby mine. but instead, the plastic has become the problem. there's 2.5 kilometres of plastic lying around, a massive eyesore and looked appalling in the landscape. and if you look back at the photos, we have of the videos of the river, it looks so alien. we knew the pla
selma's remarkable story has now been written down in her memoir "my name is selma."ficult to remove. it was installed on an industrial scale, it has been removed. 120 tonnes of this stuff has stopped this river being so fast flowing, now as you can see it is calmer, we have been watching fish jumping out of the pond beside us, so it wasn'tjust jumping out of the pond beside us, so it wasn't just aboutst tick, the way it looked, it has been about protecting the environment and making...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 7, 2020
09/20
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SFGTV
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we are expanding those efforts oeffort neighborhoods like selma and the mission. while we are seeing some progress, frankly it's clearly not enough. we need more than short-term hotel rooms. we more than parking lots for safe sleeping sites. we need housing. lots of housing. that's why this budget funds 1500 new units supportive housing. which is part of our homeless recovery plan to move 4500 people from hotels, shelters and the streets into housing in the next two years. it will help us as a city meet the needs of the unsheltered and our residents who are frustrated by the conditions they see everyday in our neighborhoods. we also can't lose the progress we've made on improving our mental health system. including funding mental health sf. that means adding more mental health beds, expanding our behavioral health access center so people can get immediate care when they need it and improving the system of care so that people struggling with mental illness and addiction. we're also creating a new crises response team so that when you call 911 or 311, because someon
we are expanding those efforts oeffort neighborhoods like selma and the mission. while we are seeing some progress, frankly it's clearly not enough. we need more than short-term hotel rooms. we more than parking lots for safe sleeping sites. we need housing. lots of housing. that's why this budget funds 1500 new units supportive housing. which is part of our homeless recovery plan to move 4500 people from hotels, shelters and the streets into housing in the next two years. it will help us as a...
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Sep 7, 2020
09/20
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segÚn un anÁlisis del (nombre en inglÉs) , leonardo selma nos trae la historia de un estadounidense deo este paÍs funcionan y son antiinmigrantes con quienes no tienen papeles y tengo la preocupaciÓn que mi madre se la prÓxima vÍctima >>> la historia de chris quien reciÉn cumpliÓ 18 aÑos y por primera vez siendo ciudadano estadounidense de padres indocumentados votarÁ en las elecciones presidenciales de noviembre >>> es para poder conseguir un mensaje y seleccionar el candidato que yo pienso que sÍ realmente va ayudar mucho a la comunidad. a la economÍa de este pais. y tambiÉn a la gente que son mÁs vulnerables de la deportaciÓn. >>> si de algo estÁ seguro chris es quiÉn quiere que sea el prÓximo presidente de estados unidos >>> siendo un demÓcrata y votando por joe biden el Único candidato que yo tengo fe quien puede ayudar a la gente indocumentada >>> la preocupaciÓn de chris que los jÓvenes no salgan a votar porque Él no los ve tan motivados >>> mirlos jÓvenes quienes no tienen el deseo de votar porque algunos no se quieren involucrarse en la polÍtica >>> por eso chris tiene un mens
segÚn un anÁlisis del (nombre en inglÉs) , leonardo selma nos trae la historia de un estadounidense deo este paÍs funcionan y son antiinmigrantes con quienes no tienen papeles y tengo la preocupaciÓn que mi madre se la prÓxima vÍctima >>> la historia de chris quien reciÉn cumpliÓ 18 aÑos y por primera vez siendo ciudadano estadounidense de padres indocumentados votarÁ en las elecciones presidenciales de noviembre >>> es para poder conseguir un mensaje y seleccionar...
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Sep 9, 2020
09/20
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ALJAZ
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convicted but those behind the so-called hit squad escaped punishment as did crown prince mohammed bin selma who is widely believed to have ordered the killing . fields the united nations and rights groups have condemned the secret trial which began last december we'll bring in i guess in a moment but 1st this report by alexey o'brien. the saudi hit squad accused of killing journalist jamal khashoggi was caught on camera landing in turkey and entering the kingdom's consulate in istanbul that's where a prominent and well connected critic of saudi crown prince mohammed bin solomon was interrogated killed and dismembered but while 21 men were detained by saudi arabia over his murder and 11 went on trial much of what happened in the courtroom remains a mystery the trial was a secret and close trial that there was no international jurors in the hands of the victims or the accused were not. published. and there's no more. appeal possible so the nature of the evidence on every technical part of the trial or most has been questioned by. internationally accepted judicial standards last year 5 of them
convicted but those behind the so-called hit squad escaped punishment as did crown prince mohammed bin selma who is widely believed to have ordered the killing . fields the united nations and rights groups have condemned the secret trial which began last december we'll bring in i guess in a moment but 1st this report by alexey o'brien. the saudi hit squad accused of killing journalist jamal khashoggi was caught on camera landing in turkey and entering the kingdom's consulate in istanbul that's...
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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KPIX
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as of now, the selma testing site will be closed due to poor air quality. >>> just look at all of that smoke across the bay area today. you can really see it. it is everywhere. san francisco, oakland, and san jose. meteorologist mary lee has a closer look at our unhealthy conditions. >> michelle, it is so bad out there. we are looking at air quality conditions unhealthy to hazardous today. it is even worse compared to yesterday. all of that heavy smoke really settling into the bay area down to the surface. you can see those purple dots, red, purple, maroon indicates unhealthy to hazardous air quality. very unhealthy through the peninsula redwood city down through san jose, tran tri- valley, leaderboard livermore, east bay, concorde unhealthy as well as for walnut creek. then, looking at very unhealthy to hazardous air for parts of oakland, san francisco. up through sausalito, very unhealthy air. ing at sarosa, petaluma, winds. because of this extreme smoke, we have r althat remains in effect gog a record of 25 days in a row with our spare the air alert. here's a live look with our trea
as of now, the selma testing site will be closed due to poor air quality. >>> just look at all of that smoke across the bay area today. you can really see it. it is everywhere. san francisco, oakland, and san jose. meteorologist mary lee has a closer look at our unhealthy conditions. >> michelle, it is so bad out there. we are looking at air quality conditions unhealthy to hazardous today. it is even worse compared to yesterday. all of that heavy smoke really settling into the...
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Sep 30, 2020
09/20
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ALJAZ
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isn't timi switching me selma but those that love and that is the me viewers and i own me and will. keep. the majority is free of our bodies who got who ordered it. not on earth you're on the lego or lego in a saloon sober you're on the. trickle scott hope a storm got out there's a new dr to me money could progress go with any preacher any $1000.00 sees bobby and. manically lightly and into thought before they go out who they ought to witness i mean he's going be in a we mustn't they must loot the pit boss that's not a mccarthy it ought to take these 2 slogan like a we want to check out the couch t.v. though it's not it up will not be doing as a clue to it in the present is that the nickel on a summer. market day by pit boss of the mystery and operator he doesn't have to lose an additional pitch. for an o.e.m. in. some. tom booms ok here but i'm not on zoe man. you know some of the. talked or was thought originally like a true scotsman i could pull a metro darkie or scotch a book from up above no good about ost america but if you let us on some of them it will be a man to man him to
isn't timi switching me selma but those that love and that is the me viewers and i own me and will. keep. the majority is free of our bodies who got who ordered it. not on earth you're on the lego or lego in a saloon sober you're on the. trickle scott hope a storm got out there's a new dr to me money could progress go with any preacher any $1000.00 sees bobby and. manically lightly and into thought before they go out who they ought to witness i mean he's going be in a we mustn't they must loot...
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Sep 29, 2020
09/20
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ALJAZ
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or any money if you see an ism team is switching me selma with those that love and that isn't any of us and i ony and will. keep. the choice is free of our bodies who got who ordered it. not on earth you're on the lego or lego most of them sober you're on the. trickle scott hope a storm got out there's general dr me money could progress go with any preacher any $1000.00 sees bobby and. manically they had 1000000 of 2 thought before they got to they ought to witness i mean he's going be in a we mustn't they must loot the pit boss that's not a mccarthy it ought to take these 2 slogan make a we want to check out the couch t.v. though it's not it up will not be doing as a clue to it in the present at the nickel on a summer. market day by pit boss of the next 20 adopter he doesn't have to lose an additional pitch. for an o.e.m. in. some. tom booms ok here but i'm not on zoe many. you know some of the kush either but i don't talk to or who thought original article or truth cartoon i could pull a metro darkie or scotch a book from above no good about ost america because if you let us on som
or any money if you see an ism team is switching me selma with those that love and that isn't any of us and i ony and will. keep. the choice is free of our bodies who got who ordered it. not on earth you're on the lego or lego most of them sober you're on the. trickle scott hope a storm got out there's general dr me money could progress go with any preacher any $1000.00 sees bobby and. manically they had 1000000 of 2 thought before they got to they ought to witness i mean he's going be in a we...
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Sep 28, 2020
09/20
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. >> reporter: in rio de janeiro the body of 78 year old selma pedrito is laid to rest.n a specially built concrete crypt for covid victims. brazil has the highest coronavirus death rate in the world after the u.s. it is at the center of a wave of infections galloping across south and central america and mexico which has killed well over 100,000 people. while here in europe, we appear to be at the very beginning of a devastating second wave. at an online only u.n. general assembly prime minister boris johnson said countries had to be honest about how the virus started and how it spread. >> i simply believe as a former covid patient that we all have a right to know. so that we can collectively do our best to prevent a recurrence. >> reporter: but first he's got a serious recurrence in the u.k. to deal with including outbreaks among students back at university and now under lockdown. >> we barely got any milk and bread to last us until monday. >> reporter: in london the infection rate is climbing too and protests against covid control measures have become regular events. y
. >> reporter: in rio de janeiro the body of 78 year old selma pedrito is laid to rest.n a specially built concrete crypt for covid victims. brazil has the highest coronavirus death rate in the world after the u.s. it is at the center of a wave of infections galloping across south and central america and mexico which has killed well over 100,000 people. while here in europe, we appear to be at the very beginning of a devastating second wave. at an online only u.n. general assembly prime...
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Sep 4, 2020
09/20
by
ALJAZ
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eye 33
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years old you see original sin slavery and all the vestiges of it i can guarantee you everything in selma 4 years but i guarantee one thing. i mean a whole heck of a lot better but his was a centrist message of compassion and also to connote his business owners and police coping with days of arson and looting he offered condemnation of violence and a promise to pursue rioters so we're gonna see how angry you are if you burn you should be held accountable as someone who dug out of the house. the stump marked a dramatic contrast to trump's appearance here on tuesday when he declined even to say jacob blake's name condemned demonstrators and then sided clearly with police must give far greater support to a law enforcement it's all about giving them additional support these are great people wisconsin is a crucial battleground state one that trump won by the slimmest of margins in 2016 that year hillary clinton was widely criticized for failing to visit the state it was biden's 2nd campaign stop since the democratic national convention in august biden's visit to this kenosha church comes ahead
years old you see original sin slavery and all the vestiges of it i can guarantee you everything in selma 4 years but i guarantee one thing. i mean a whole heck of a lot better but his was a centrist message of compassion and also to connote his business owners and police coping with days of arson and looting he offered condemnation of violence and a promise to pursue rioters so we're gonna see how angry you are if you burn you should be held accountable as someone who dug out of the house. the...
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Sep 29, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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if i look at what happened in the 60s there was a protest, selma and montgomery and the great john lewis, the marches, i was a kid in birmingham, i remember the protests in kelly ingraham park where the place was bombed. we just came to the 60 seventh anniversary of that on september 15th. i remember the protest and bull carter's police dog. it wasn't just protest that got us to 64, 65 in civil rights legislation but was a legislative agenda or the use of the courts, thurgood marshall and the naacp taking cases to court since the 30s to find places they could break down segregation. they had to use the institutions in addition to protesting. i tried to stay in the washington post piece each of us have to decide what our role is going to be in racial justice. it is a hard issue. my dna is 3% european. my great-grandmother was the great-granddaughter of a slave owner. i have ancestors who are slaveowners and slaves. this is a deep wound in america. a birth defect at our founding. what conversation can i have. what am i concerned about? it is the impact of race on educational differences. w
if i look at what happened in the 60s there was a protest, selma and montgomery and the great john lewis, the marches, i was a kid in birmingham, i remember the protests in kelly ingraham park where the place was bombed. we just came to the 60 seventh anniversary of that on september 15th. i remember the protest and bull carter's police dog. it wasn't just protest that got us to 64, 65 in civil rights legislation but was a legislative agenda or the use of the courts, thurgood marshall and the...
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Sep 1, 2020
09/20
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the royal family to be detained as part of an anti corruption campaign by crown prince abdullah bin selma simon mabon is the director of the richardson institute for peace studies he says the sacking is aimed at consolidating the crown prince's hold on power. i think it's symbolic in the sense that it relates to what many of us. as a serious failure and of the yemen conflict but i don't think it has so much that do with those duty chip errors or pops there's a useful byproduct of the saudi military via but pertains more. to the i guess what some people are calling the purge 2.0 this continued after that to get rid of the what many see to be the final remnants of dissent against mohammed bin solomon's rule so i would argue that's more about cracking down on corruption and assuring them it been someone has complete power and autonomy in riyadh than across the saudi political spectrum rather than anything reflecting military issues and strategic failings in the yemen conflict as much as it is easy to draw that conclusion what's interesting to know i guess is that many across the kingdom not
the royal family to be detained as part of an anti corruption campaign by crown prince abdullah bin selma simon mabon is the director of the richardson institute for peace studies he says the sacking is aimed at consolidating the crown prince's hold on power. i think it's symbolic in the sense that it relates to what many of us. as a serious failure and of the yemen conflict but i don't think it has so much that do with those duty chip errors or pops there's a useful byproduct of the saudi...
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Sep 18, 2020
09/20
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COM
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we're sometimes called, which is the legal arm of the civil rights movement, represented john lewis, selmaosa parks, mohamed ali when he wanted to get his license back. we have been the legal arm of the civil rights struggle. the naacp is a large membership mobilizing grassroots organization. we don't have members. we're largely a legal organization. >> trevor: feels like 2020 has thrust this organization back into the limelight in a way that i guess no one would have wanted really or expected. what have you seen this year that has been different to maybe the past decade even? >> well, you know, it's interesting, the best of civil rights progress in this con has always happened when there are an alkemy of several things connect together. so grassroots mobilization and protest. when legal organizations are firing on all cylinders and i think really for the last three years people have recognized the importance of civil rights lawyers again, and when there is kind of a political moment, when all those things are happening at the same time, that was what was happening during the civil rights
we're sometimes called, which is the legal arm of the civil rights movement, represented john lewis, selmaosa parks, mohamed ali when he wanted to get his license back. we have been the legal arm of the civil rights struggle. the naacp is a large membership mobilizing grassroots organization. we don't have members. we're largely a legal organization. >> trevor: feels like 2020 has thrust this organization back into the limelight in a way that i guess no one would have wanted really or...
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95
Sep 30, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN3
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eye 95
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we remember selma and montgomery, and we've just remembered the great john lewis and the marches. and i was a kid in birmingham. i remember the protests in kelly ingram park right there next to 16th street baptist church where those little girls were bombed. we've just come through the 57th anniversary of that on september 15th. i remember the protests and the violence and bull connor's police dogs and all of that. but i also know that it wasn't just protests that got us to '64 and '65 in legislation. it was a legislative agenda. it was also the use of the courts. thurgood marshall and the naacp had been taking cases to courts since the '30s to find places they could break down segregation. so, you have to use the institutions in addition to just protesting. i would also say to every american as i try to say in that "washington post" piece, each of us has to decide what our role is going to be in bringing racial justice. it's really a hard issue. judy, my dna is 40% european. that's because my great grandmother was the daughter of a slave owner. and i have ancestors who were slave
we remember selma and montgomery, and we've just remembered the great john lewis and the marches. and i was a kid in birmingham. i remember the protests in kelly ingram park right there next to 16th street baptist church where those little girls were bombed. we've just come through the 57th anniversary of that on september 15th. i remember the protests and the violence and bull connor's police dogs and all of that. but i also know that it wasn't just protests that got us to '64 and '65 in...
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182
Sep 13, 2020
09/20
by
KPIX
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eye 182
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the blaze broke out a one 1:30 on shipley street and selma. video from the citizen app shows flames of thick lock smoke were shooting out of the roof. it took cruz three hours to fully contain the blaze. no one was hurt in the fire locally. the cause is under investigation. >>> search and rescue crews have found three more bo thbu. that brings it up to 12. there is still 13 people missing. the fire has destroyed the small town of perry creek and other mountain communities. as a whole, the north complex granted 258,000 acre since morning. containment is up to 22%. by chris have weather on their side this weekend. spoke locking the storm. lower temperatures and increased humidity. here in the bay area, full containment is progressing slowly. it stands at 87%. progress say there are minimal flames. they just need to finish mopping up. however, the other two major buyers are almost fully contain. the fire at the dorothy in one country at 76% containment. the fires of the east foothills in san jose even parts of east bay senate 90%. the president i
the blaze broke out a one 1:30 on shipley street and selma. video from the citizen app shows flames of thick lock smoke were shooting out of the roof. it took cruz three hours to fully contain the blaze. no one was hurt in the fire locally. the cause is under investigation. >>> search and rescue crews have found three more bo thbu. that brings it up to 12. there is still 13 people missing. the fire has destroyed the small town of perry creek and other mountain communities. as a whole,...
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Sep 28, 2020
09/20
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. >> in rio de janeiro, the body of 78-year-old selma pedrito is laid to rest in a concrete crypt for covid victims. brazil has the highest coronavirus death rate in h the world. galloping across south and central america and mexico which has killed oerd 11,000 people. in europe we appear to be at the beginning of a def stagt second wave. at an on line only u.n. assemy general, boris johnson. >> i simply believe as a former covid patient that we all have a right to know. so that we can collectively do our fwoels spraent recurrence. >> reporter: first he's got a serious recurrence in the uk to deal with, including outbreaks among students and university now under lockdown. >> we've only got enough bread to last until monday. >> reporter: protests against covid control measures have become regular events. you have to the look to wuhan china where the pandemic started to see life nearly back to normal. thanks only to a lockdown so heavy handed it would have been politically unthinkable in the west. elizabeth palmer, cbs news, london. >> there's a lot more news ahead on the "cbs overnight
. >> in rio de janeiro, the body of 78-year-old selma pedrito is laid to rest in a concrete crypt for covid victims. brazil has the highest coronavirus death rate in h the world. galloping across south and central america and mexico which has killed oerd 11,000 people. in europe we appear to be at the beginning of a def stagt second wave. at an on line only u.n. assemy general, boris johnson. >> i simply believe as a former covid patient that we all have a right to know. so that we...
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Sep 12, 2020
09/20
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but whether it was seneca falls or selma or stonewall, we still have heroes who worked through all oforward. so we want to-- we don't doubt our elections will be free and fair, that they won't be manipulated or question the veracity of or scare people with intimidation of who is going to be showing up at the polls to watch who's voting. so we have work to do to protect the vote. so, again, when we win, some of the things that may have seen inevitable to some, to us, seemed inevitable, but to others seemed inconceivable, we want to shorten the distance between the inevitable and the conceivable. for example, we had the equality act to remove all discrimination against l.g.b.t.q. members of society. and just think back, what has happened. we have marriage equality now. that's a giant step forward. but we still have... challenges ahead that legislation can take care of. >> stephen: madam speaker, i have to take a quick commercial break. but please don't go away, and don't you go away at home because we'll be right back with more nancy pelosi. sorry, ma'am, we just had to take away for ju
but whether it was seneca falls or selma or stonewall, we still have heroes who worked through all oforward. so we want to-- we don't doubt our elections will be free and fair, that they won't be manipulated or question the veracity of or scare people with intimidation of who is going to be showing up at the polls to watch who's voting. so we have work to do to protect the vote. so, again, when we win, some of the things that may have seen inevitable to some, to us, seemed inevitable, but to...
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Sep 6, 2020
09/20
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it was what he nearly died for in selma and what so many fought for.ght is under renewed assault. the incumbent president is trying to make it more difficult for mail-in ballots to count, and the john r. lewis voting acts right of 2020 languaishes n congress. the provisions of the 1965 voting rights act require states and localities wito seek clearae before election laws and policies. the house has passed the bill, but the senate has refused to act. add in russian disinformation designed to destabilize our democracy, and we're facing an autumn of diskette. focusing on voting and voting early may then be the most patriotic thing we can do. think of the blood that's been shed for the ballot. there's saga of john lewis and so many other black people in the american south, and this year marks the centennial of the 19th amendment which granted women the suffrage. a few months before the second continental congress broke with great big, abigail adams advised john adams to remember the ladies. a human rights convention issued a dilation of resolutions tha the
it was what he nearly died for in selma and what so many fought for.ght is under renewed assault. the incumbent president is trying to make it more difficult for mail-in ballots to count, and the john r. lewis voting acts right of 2020 languaishes n congress. the provisions of the 1965 voting rights act require states and localities wito seek clearae before election laws and policies. the house has passed the bill, but the senate has refused to act. add in russian disinformation designed to...
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Sep 13, 2020
09/20
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app for access >>> a fire at a san francisco warehouse didn't hurt anyone, but didnthis morning in selma. video from citizen app shows flames and thick black smoke shooting out of the roof. it took crews three hours to contain the fire and the cause is under investigation. >>> estate is getting a much needed assist in fighting dozens of wildfires just within the last hour the world's largest plane and cargo aircraft landed from new jersey. on board we are at least three fire engines work was all those trucks slowly being backed out onto the tarmac. 10 firefighters from the forest service also with the cross- country flight. they're heading straight out to help battle the flames. >> my understanding is they are going to be deployed to one of the nearby fires here. this is on all hands on deck. any help is greatly appreciated. i think it's really special that they came completely from the east coast of the united states here in california. >> san francisco fire department worked with fema to get extra resources out here. >>> speaking of heavy zone. it was no easy feat. biologists tranquili
app for access >>> a fire at a san francisco warehouse didn't hurt anyone, but didnthis morning in selma. video from citizen app shows flames and thick black smoke shooting out of the roof. it took crews three hours to contain the fire and the cause is under investigation. >>> estate is getting a much needed assist in fighting dozens of wildfires just within the last hour the world's largest plane and cargo aircraft landed from new jersey. on board we are at least three fire...
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Sep 7, 2020
09/20
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dedicated his life to working on equality from sit ins to 1963 march often washington to 19675 march in selmaame to be known as "bloody sunday" john lewis was there presidential historior an celebrates john lewis's life in his new book "truth goes marching on "i before passing away john lewis contributed the afterward for the book writing this -- joining me now pulitzer prize winner jon meachum his new book debuted at number one on the number one seller list. congratulations. it's certainly a worthy story to debut at number one. i'm struck by the afterward he wrote for you while he was still alive and i'm struck at the moment we're living in where we are not one, we're more divided than we've ever been, we have a president who is trying to divide us further and it feels like right now there's just no way to knit us back together. what did you learn about john lewis's struggle and the struggle for equality that maybe gives you more hope than i have at the moment? >> well, i do have a little more hope than that and it's not me, it's congressman lewis so let me channel him for a second. what he
dedicated his life to working on equality from sit ins to 1963 march often washington to 19675 march in selmaame to be known as "bloody sunday" john lewis was there presidential historior an celebrates john lewis's life in his new book "truth goes marching on "i before passing away john lewis contributed the afterward for the book writing this -- joining me now pulitzer prize winner jon meachum his new book debuted at number one on the number one seller list....
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Sep 22, 2020
09/20
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movement when there were broadcast stations that wanted to turn off what was happening in places like selma. speak to us a little bit about the history in terms of media policy of actually eliminating our ability to be authentic in those images. before you do, if you have questions, events @brookings.edu. and continue the #digitaljustice. >> thank you, nicole. what a lot of people expect but may not know is that especially across the south in the '40s, '50s, and early '60s, there was something real. it was a thing called a news black out. governors got out with broadcasters. police officials got together with newspaper publishers. and when things were happening across this nation that would, under any other circumstance, news worthy, deserve to be covered, they were not. so, it is particularly -- we're particularly sensitive about it in south carolina where there were a number of incidents. how many people know about the orangeburg massacre? i've got a picture i might share later. have you ever heard of sara may fleming? sara may fleming was a 20-year-old african-american female from east s
movement when there were broadcast stations that wanted to turn off what was happening in places like selma. speak to us a little bit about the history in terms of media policy of actually eliminating our ability to be authentic in those images. before you do, if you have questions, events @brookings.edu. and continue the #digitaljustice. >> thank you, nicole. what a lot of people expect but may not know is that especially across the south in the '40s, '50s, and early '60s, there was...
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Sep 26, 2020
09/20
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CNNW
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. >> reporter: and it produce the him to selma where he was beaten nearly to death by straight tree stateers, and it made john lewis a hero to generations. >> i remember so wellght state troopers, and it made john lewis a hero to generations. >> i remember so well that i was beat and left at the foot of the bridge. thought i was going to die. >> reporter: he would go on to march again many times. year after year, bringing bipartisan groups of lawmakers to that very spot. and in recent yearyears, lewis feared the right to vote was in trouble again. >> they are saying in effect that history cannot repeat itself, but i say walk in my shoes. >> and that is the unfinished business because as he always said, the vote is sacred. he said say almost sacred. >> reporter: and in his final public appearance before his death, lewis appeared here at "black lives matter" plaza in washington, d.c. and the gathering place for's protest movement. abby phillip, cnn, washington. >> be sure to tune in, the all new film premieres tomorrow night at 9:00. >>> and the last six months have posed tremendous challen
. >> reporter: and it produce the him to selma where he was beaten nearly to death by straight tree stateers, and it made john lewis a hero to generations. >> i remember so wellght state troopers, and it made john lewis a hero to generations. >> i remember so well that i was beat and left at the foot of the bridge. thought i was going to die. >> reporter: he would go on to march again many times. year after year, bringing bipartisan groups of lawmakers to that very spot....
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Sep 12, 2020
09/20
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KGO
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. >> reporter: selma rivera launched her youtube channel to chronicle her battle to keep clutter downhe now has more than 87,000 subscribers. i got so sick of it, and it was just time to get rid of some stuff. >> reporter: she's now giving tips to help all of us declutter. tip number one, she says the best place to start is when shopping. >> i always ask myself do i really need it or do i want it? it's just going to take up space that you could use for something else. >> reporter: tip number two, don't let the clutter accumulate. >> if you see a place already starting to look cluttered, just stop it right then. >> reporter: tip number three, get into a routine and get a little done every day. it's the only way to stay on top she says. >> if you do something every single day, it can be the smallest thing, it makes a huge difference where you don't see clutter in your home. >> all right. we're now joined by the blogger and youtuber brianna koehler from "bits of bri." brian that, good morning to you. i guess the first question here is what are the very first steps when we're preparing to
. >> reporter: selma rivera launched her youtube channel to chronicle her battle to keep clutter downhe now has more than 87,000 subscribers. i got so sick of it, and it was just time to get rid of some stuff. >> reporter: she's now giving tips to help all of us declutter. tip number one, she says the best place to start is when shopping. >> i always ask myself do i really need it or do i want it? it's just going to take up space that you could use for something else. >>...
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international gas at that event i think for now it seems like the regime does have some stability selma reserves of civility the security services all still open now but you know this massive police presence is costing them huge amounts of money trying to keep those people loyal and other hand the protest to show no real sign of being intimidated by anything the government can throw at them and for now when you talk and they say we we we're tired of being afraid we are not going to go back to sitting home and keeping quiet. let's finish on fashion the pandemic has hit almost all industries and sectors hard and fashion is no exception there's been almost no live shows for designers to present their new ideas but one famous italian label is now celebrating a catwalk comeback while the few handpicked guest said valentino's show near milan had to wear masks throughout the event the models themselves were free to show their faces as they showed off the brand's 2021 summer collection the show marked the end of this year's milan fashion week. watching d w news there's always lots more to read
international gas at that event i think for now it seems like the regime does have some stability selma reserves of civility the security services all still open now but you know this massive police presence is costing them huge amounts of money trying to keep those people loyal and other hand the protest to show no real sign of being intimidated by anything the government can throw at them and for now when you talk and they say we we we're tired of being afraid we are not going to go back to...
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Sep 12, 2020
09/20
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KNTV
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did get a chance to meet gwen ifill before she passed i was so excited i ran across the street in selmareasure, so yeah it's big because for some little kid, some little black girl, i'm like that to them in a way like they're maybe seeing me and feeling like, okay, i can do this. this is something that i could do >> jimmy: that's exactly right i can do that. i can be that, yeah. we should talk about some of the news that's happening. obviously, today is the 19th anniversary of september 11th attacks were you working in news then? what do you remember about tha >> i was i mean, by then, we had three young kids but we were living in florida and i was now working for the nbc affiliate, wtvj in miami and i remember it was my day off, actually. 9/11, it was having an off day and my brother had come up from denver and was staying with us i remember him yelling, oh s word a plane just hit the world trade center and at first, i thought maybe it was just a wrong-way plane because we had actually had a story like that not long before that in miami where a a guy just went off track and hit a build
did get a chance to meet gwen ifill before she passed i was so excited i ran across the street in selmareasure, so yeah it's big because for some little kid, some little black girl, i'm like that to them in a way like they're maybe seeing me and feeling like, okay, i can do this. this is something that i could do >> jimmy: that's exactly right i can do that. i can be that, yeah. we should talk about some of the news that's happening. obviously, today is the 19th anniversary of september...
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Sep 22, 2020
09/20
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MSNBCW
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alabama was the birthplace of the voting rights act in selma and john lewis and all that we went throughll of the history that came back to life this summer with john lewis' passing. to not have a clear what the voting rights act is, is unconscionable. it's just be that he wouldn't just have a basic, in-depth knowledge about that. but that's what we're seeing over and over can tommy tuberville. he gives a half-time pep talk to his team. that's it. he doesn't get down in the weeds. he just gives that pep talk. >> senator doug jones, thank you for your time. this time you're not facing an opponent who would have trouble getting into hot topic. but you are still facing somebody who is a very interesting figure. very good luck in your race. >> joy, thanks for having me. >> of course. thank you very much. >>> and up next, battleground pennsylvania and the republican effort to count as few ballots as possible. that story straight ahead. stay with us. knowing who we are is hard. it's hard. eliminate who you are not first, and you're going to find yourself where you need to be. ♪ the race is nev
alabama was the birthplace of the voting rights act in selma and john lewis and all that we went throughll of the history that came back to life this summer with john lewis' passing. to not have a clear what the voting rights act is, is unconscionable. it's just be that he wouldn't just have a basic, in-depth knowledge about that. but that's what we're seeing over and over can tommy tuberville. he gives a half-time pep talk to his team. that's it. he doesn't get down in the weeds. he just gives...
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Sep 14, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 38
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movement when there were broadcast stations that wanted to turn off what was happening in places like selma. tell us about history in terms of media policy of eliminating our ability to be authentic and those images. before you do, if you have questions at events at brookings .edu and use the # digital justice. >> thank you, nicole. what a lot of people suspect but may not know is that especially across the south in the 50s, 40s, 50s and early 60s there was something real, it was a thing called a news black out. governors got together with broadcasters and police officials got together with a newspaper publishers and when things were happening across this nation that would, under any other circumstance newsworthy, deserve to be covered, they were not. it is particularly sensitive about it in south carolina where there were a number of incidents, how many people know about the orangeburg massacre? i've got a picture that i can share later. have you ever heard of sarah mae fleming? sarah may fleming was a 20 -year-old african american female from south carolina, and from a rural place, who go
movement when there were broadcast stations that wanted to turn off what was happening in places like selma. tell us about history in terms of media policy of eliminating our ability to be authentic and those images. before you do, if you have questions at events at brookings .edu and use the # digital justice. >> thank you, nicole. what a lot of people suspect but may not know is that especially across the south in the 50s, 40s, 50s and early 60s there was something real, it was a thing...
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Sep 2, 2020
09/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 36
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important it's a part of my of my history of my heart i'm just a united have completed the 1st made to selma signing ahead of the new english premier league season to an event to be joining the red devils from i.x. for nearly $47000000.00 the midfielder arrives often pressing in the last season with 8 goals and 5 assists in $23.00 games you know to begin their e.p.l. campaign on september the mine team against crystal palace. 2016 u.s. open champion angelica kerber has booked her place in the 3rd round of this year's tournament the 17th a seed dominated this encounter against german compassionate and eileen afraid some well the 3 time grand slam winner suke the match 6376. $166.00 or she will be joined in the next round by a 2 time grand slam champion pitt i could bit of a he succeed with a strange sets win a against ukraine's katty now close love. to dan i left libya has lost the overall leave at the tour de france after receiving a 22nd penalty for breaching the rules the frenchman snatched a bottle of from a team staff member 17 kilometers from stage 5 finish line riders however are not a
important it's a part of my of my history of my heart i'm just a united have completed the 1st made to selma signing ahead of the new english premier league season to an event to be joining the red devils from i.x. for nearly $47000000.00 the midfielder arrives often pressing in the last season with 8 goals and 5 assists in $23.00 games you know to begin their e.p.l. campaign on september the mine team against crystal palace. 2016 u.s. open champion angelica kerber has booked her place in the...
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170
Sep 17, 2020
09/20
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MSNBCW
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we talked about john lewis this year he lived it in selma and overcame it, just like those brave students in the little rock nine who faced violence for the non-violent act of going to school in america. that was over 50 years ago, which is a long time for some injustices to remain so similar today. and we don't even need to go back that far to get the point in the four years since kaepernick set off that firestorm with his peaceful act, america's seen a spate of police killings of unarmed black people we can say some of their names donnell thompson, terence crusher, jessica nelson williams, atatiana jefferson, michael wilson, chad robertson, kita o'neill, kevin bruce mason, stephon clark, james leatherwood, cynthia fields, gregory griffin. those are many names you may not have heard on the news plus those that garnered more investigation and attention. breonna taylor, george floyd, rayshard brooks. take it together and it's almost 90 unarmed black people who have been killed by police since kaepernick first took a knee, plus hundreds more accounts of excessive force that did not ultimate
we talked about john lewis this year he lived it in selma and overcame it, just like those brave students in the little rock nine who faced violence for the non-violent act of going to school in america. that was over 50 years ago, which is a long time for some injustices to remain so similar today. and we don't even need to go back that far to get the point in the four years since kaepernick set off that firestorm with his peaceful act, america's seen a spate of police killings of unarmed...
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31
Sep 8, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN3
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involvement in vietnam, you've got martin luther king and tens and tens of thousands of others marching in selma, alabama, to ensure the right of african-americans to vote in a state that had long disenfranchised them. so, right? so there's this kind of parallel social movement occurring as these early -- and we can use the word now -- antiwar advocates are trying to come up with their own answers and solutions. so obviously to some extent this nascent anti-war activism is going to look at the civil rights movement. they have a repertoire. they already have some means and tools and practices that might be adaptable to our cause. so that's one piece out there. there's another piece out there that's almost happening simultaneously but it's, again, a precursor to this. we talked earlier about what was happening on the university of california berkeley campus in the fall of 1964, really just weeks after the gulf of tonkin resolution is passed. on the campus at the university of california, you remember, you had the free-speech movement erupting, mario savio getting on top of the police car, telling
involvement in vietnam, you've got martin luther king and tens and tens of thousands of others marching in selma, alabama, to ensure the right of african-americans to vote in a state that had long disenfranchised them. so, right? so there's this kind of parallel social movement occurring as these early -- and we can use the word now -- antiwar advocates are trying to come up with their own answers and solutions. so obviously to some extent this nascent anti-war activism is going to look at the...