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Feb 12, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 25
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house at the white house. the money went to their owners. and so for her son to have done that was really kind of a shocking revelation to me when i discovered that. and there's a reason why these families brought their enslaved workers. and that was simply because congress never gave them enough money to run for the president's mansion house in new york and philadelphia. and that was part of why the washington's brought. they also hired individuals, both whites, to work in their executive houses. but they didn't have enough money. and and and sarah polk was another good example where she sort of made a campaign promise that if she were first lady, she would stay within her budget. and part of the way she she did that was she got rid of ten staff members, the white house, and replaced them all with her enslaved servants. and that was how she budget. so congress has never done enough and. this is sort of the whole history of first ladies and the white house in the frustrations they had of running this house wit
house at the white house. the money went to their owners. and so for her son to have done that was really kind of a shocking revelation to me when i discovered that. and there's a reason why these families brought their enslaved workers. and that was simply because congress never gave them enough money to run for the president's mansion house in new york and philadelphia. and that was part of why the washington's brought. they also hired individuals, both whites, to work in their executive...
45
45
Feb 24, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 45
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one very, very role, of course, in the white house is that of the white house. social secretary, relying on one's expertise in protocol, tact, etiquette, hospitality. i think there might be some magic. it has, and it remains key to build relationships, maintain diplomatic ones, present the most welcoming experience possible at the white house. the kansas city star in 1921 reflected her duties will be as complex as that of an. that was laura harlan, the social secretary for, warren g. harding and calvin coolidge, who served from that year to 1929. but, of course, was 20 years prior, in 1901, during president theodore roosevelt's administration. that first lady edith hired the very first official social secretary at the white house, isabella hagner james, and ever since social secretaries have helped create memorable experiences for all guests at the white house from kings and heads of states, artists, scholars and little children chasing those easter eggs at the white house easter egg roll. while the reins of the job varies and you will likely never them on a goo
one very, very role, of course, in the white house is that of the white house. social secretary, relying on one's expertise in protocol, tact, etiquette, hospitality. i think there might be some magic. it has, and it remains key to build relationships, maintain diplomatic ones, present the most welcoming experience possible at the white house. the kansas city star in 1921 reflected her duties will be as complex as that of an. that was laura harlan, the social secretary for, warren g. harding...
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27
Feb 23, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN
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eye 27
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buying drugs from the white man, buying guns from the white man. remember when all of this hit the united states when reagan was in there. how come our black people are afraid to speak up about that? how the drugs are getting in her neighborhood. how old are black people have worked back through the years and some just get $500 a month on social security and will not get food stamps. why don't you address what is happening to us right now. none of you are getting up there talking about that. host: let's give jason hill a chance. guest: i'm not sure what she means by reparations because of drugs. my response would be why would african-americans or people of color, whatever term she is comfortable with using, why have they relinquished control of their communities to these folks? there are communities of color. i will use the word african-american or black because that is the terminology used in this country that have taken their communities back, that have taken responsibility for their communities. 74% of black children born in this country are bor
buying drugs from the white man, buying guns from the white man. remember when all of this hit the united states when reagan was in there. how come our black people are afraid to speak up about that? how the drugs are getting in her neighborhood. how old are black people have worked back through the years and some just get $500 a month on social security and will not get food stamps. why don't you address what is happening to us right now. none of you are getting up there talking about that....
22
22
Feb 27, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 22
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white southerners violently overthrew, and white northerners and westerners let them. i saw death coming. tells that story. it follows black families on their journeys out of slavery through their experiences of the war white southerners wait on their freedom to their testimony before congress and beyond. it shows how black people understood, articulated the human costs of reconstruction, overthrow, abandonment. and it does that through the stories of families like abe and eliza's. on june 6th, 1871, abe spent the day in his blacksmith shop, and eliza finished her homemaking tasks. the children had completed their chores and lessons. what time for play after they were all in bed at home at 11 p.m. when someone knocked the door and asked the babe what home the family never heard any threats and were not thinking about such a thing. eliza later said that's why abe answered that he was home and he got up from the bed to open door. but something perhaps the sound, the visitors and his awareness of the threat they posed or a feeling his skin tightening and puckering with go
white southerners violently overthrew, and white northerners and westerners let them. i saw death coming. tells that story. it follows black families on their journeys out of slavery through their experiences of the war white southerners wait on their freedom to their testimony before congress and beyond. it shows how black people understood, articulated the human costs of reconstruction, overthrow, abandonment. and it does that through the stories of families like abe and eliza's. on june 6th,...
20
20
Feb 18, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 20
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or working white americans. and it seems that we we actually miss out on chances for solidarity by erecting these these divisions based on on physical characteristics that might even be the heart of the matter at hand. yeah, that's a great point. in my book, i argue i'm not all against policies that are meant to help people, to help people that are the unluckiest in our society but like martin luther king expounded in his book why we can't wait. i think the way those policies should be implemented are on the basis by socioeconomic poverty rather than on the basis of race to have a real conversation about the spectrum of disadvantage as a country where there so much wealth and so much poverty. i think we have to acknowledge this point that poverty, however, like to measure it. whether that's wealth, income or some combination aren't measure that is really the crux of what distinguishes people with privilege and without it is this country. at least it does. it delineates that difference much better than race does
or working white americans. and it seems that we we actually miss out on chances for solidarity by erecting these these divisions based on on physical characteristics that might even be the heart of the matter at hand. yeah, that's a great point. in my book, i argue i'm not all against policies that are meant to help people, to help people that are the unluckiest in our society but like martin luther king expounded in his book why we can't wait. i think the way those policies should be...
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Feb 18, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 44
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white supremacists took control. they were able to do pretty much through legislation, what they had needed, terror do beforehand, terror not totally disappear. we know well that there were lynchings that continued right up into the 1950s and so on. but so the klan of the seventies wasn't really needed as a organized terror group after the restoration of white supremacy, the klan of the 1920s was genuinely inspired by the film birth of a nation, by a proto. it is all very well known by a promoter in this in atlanta who saw movies and thought that is a great we should try to bear in mind that americans have always go back to tocqueville writing about how americans love to form organizations and so on, fraternities and organizations and this was a guy. simmons was his name who had had been a canvasser for various fraternities. and it was a profit enterprise. it was it made a number of people very wealthy and. it was it had more membership in the north than south in the 1920s and thirties. it's as far north as new engla
white supremacists took control. they were able to do pretty much through legislation, what they had needed, terror do beforehand, terror not totally disappear. we know well that there were lynchings that continued right up into the 1950s and so on. but so the klan of the seventies wasn't really needed as a organized terror group after the restoration of white supremacy, the klan of the 1920s was genuinely inspired by the film birth of a nation, by a proto. it is all very well known by a...
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18
Feb 3, 2024
02/24
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BBCNEWS
tv
eye 18
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the holy grail of white shark research is the birth of a great white shark.e've ever been to the actual birth of a great white shark. phil believes the size and shape of the fins all point to a very young shark. he thinks the white layer could be residue from birth. if this is indeed a newborn white shark that still has l this, what we call embryonic layer, mucus—like substance still on its body — - never been seen before. so this would be the first case that we've seen such a thing. i who knows how old the shark actually is? - is it minutes old, hours old, days old, weeks old? - but nowhere else in literature has such a finding _ ever been observed. but both men also say that this may be a skin condition. other experts accept this could be a historic discovery but that they need more evidence. everything that we know i about reproduction in white sharks comes from about ten females that were killed thatj were pregnant at various stages of pregnancy. - that's it. so we really don't know much, if anything, about white - shark reproduction. so i've seen the foo
the holy grail of white shark research is the birth of a great white shark.e've ever been to the actual birth of a great white shark. phil believes the size and shape of the fins all point to a very young shark. he thinks the white layer could be residue from birth. if this is indeed a newborn white shark that still has l this, what we call embryonic layer, mucus—like substance still on its body — - never been seen before. so this would be the first case that we've seen such a thing. i who...
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39
Feb 28, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN
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eye 39
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host: it is called "the hidden roots of white supremacy."uest: he is one of the great posters, a demographer and poster. they do a poll of 15,000 people and they do it every year. i highly recommend reading and following it because it will show you where the right is going and how it is cleaving a park on religious lines. like evangelical christians are going one direction and everyone else is going the other. . host: let's talk to -- in idaho. caller: i am in michigan. host: sorry about that. caller: -- i found her to be a wonderful person, very strong in what she believes. i loved her expenses in mississippi and what she went through and how she became the person she became. guest: i appreciate that. one of the most fun expenses was talking to miss myrlie about growing up in mississippi. she talks about her grandmother and her on. i sent her on -- and her aunt. she talks about these women who raised her so lovingly. she had talks about her grandmother who was an enslaved person who was alive until she was five years old which shows you tha
host: it is called "the hidden roots of white supremacy."uest: he is one of the great posters, a demographer and poster. they do a poll of 15,000 people and they do it every year. i highly recommend reading and following it because it will show you where the right is going and how it is cleaving a park on religious lines. like evangelical christians are going one direction and everyone else is going the other. . host: let's talk to -- in idaho. caller: i am in michigan. host: sorry...
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193
Feb 24, 2024
02/24
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FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 193
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white privilege is real. this is america, where racism is the number one value our populace seeks to uphold. and we obviously have a egregious racism in this country, which tells you, as we said last night, it's not the program, it's the programmer. and it matters. google is one of the most powerful, if not the most powerful company in the world. it's worth over $1.7 trillion and has become inseparable from our daily lives. when we want to know something, we google it. if someone googles you, god knows what they might find. if you happen not to be as woke as its creators with these identity obsessed freaks in charge, it means whatever we get back from gemini will be as truthful as cnn, covering nick sandmann. but as disturbing as it is, is it really any surprise that the invisible hand controlling the racist eye is a reversed racist himself? my advice if he really believes white privilege is real, he should resign as soon as possible. so an honest nonwhite could have his role. well, that's how i got this job,
white privilege is real. this is america, where racism is the number one value our populace seeks to uphold. and we obviously have a egregious racism in this country, which tells you, as we said last night, it's not the program, it's the programmer. and it matters. google is one of the most powerful, if not the most powerful company in the world. it's worth over $1.7 trillion and has become inseparable from our daily lives. when we want to know something, we google it. if someone googles you,...
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33
Feb 24, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
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eye 33
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white freedom of course.then the creation of the jim crow constitution. 1901 disenfranchized official disenfranchize movement through that and the kind of breaking the pretense of populist alliance between black and white farmers and on into the new deal, in which things get a little more complicated. yeah yeah. that was interesting in the new deal where the south needed their economy was poor, so the federal money coming in so they were like, okay, we're going to take the federal money. but we went still the pushback and don't stay in our know what strings are attached that money and being very vocal about pushing back but we want the money but we want to push back at the same time exactly know so if the government can they the south is very poor it has this kind of it's it's dependance on cotton as a as a commodity is failing it the depression began in the 1920s really in the south by the thirties they're desperate so the new deal's great as long as for the right people but if the federal government has tha
white freedom of course.then the creation of the jim crow constitution. 1901 disenfranchized official disenfranchize movement through that and the kind of breaking the pretense of populist alliance between black and white farmers and on into the new deal, in which things get a little more complicated. yeah yeah. that was interesting in the new deal where the south needed their economy was poor, so the federal money coming in so they were like, okay, we're going to take the federal money. but we...
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49
Feb 27, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN
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eye 49
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most of the people that have that are white women.ffirmative action, the greatest beneficiaries and highest number of beneficiaries are white women. so, when you go after d.e.i. you may think you are getting rid of black people in spaces you don't think they should be. things like airline pilots shouldn't be black, surgeons. he wants them out of where. i get it. you have an issue with black people but d.e.i. benefits not just black people but people with disabilities, white women, women of color, asian american women and veterans. a lot of d.e.i. programs are specifically to bring veterans into spaces where they are underrepresented so it is bringing everyone who is underrepresented into spaces where there isn't diversity because those positions have been held almost exclusively by white men regardless of their qualifications. so they have been able to hold on to 100% of positions without necessarily being the most qualified. it is about getting qualified, women of color and all people so they are represented at their population level
most of the people that have that are white women.ffirmative action, the greatest beneficiaries and highest number of beneficiaries are white women. so, when you go after d.e.i. you may think you are getting rid of black people in spaces you don't think they should be. things like airline pilots shouldn't be black, surgeons. he wants them out of where. i get it. you have an issue with black people but d.e.i. benefits not just black people but people with disabilities, white women, women of...
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56
Mar 1, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 56
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white landowners, white employers, there are also white employers and that north moving heaven and earth to get them to come north for it so there were subsidies to migrate. et cetera. they are countervailing forces, in a way. then, of, black: the south, many of them are very eager to get out. and so they found their way. i'm interested your comments on the way in which white supremacy and >> am interested in your comment and the way in which white supremacy and -- in the south created distortions in constitutional law and the legal structure, not only in the, and whether you think those distortions persist today and another form. >> yeah. wow. some of these are constitutional and some of them aren't. one thing that occurs to me is that there were things called -- in 1866. when andrew johnson is president, he brings in -- basically allows southern states to reconstruct themselves with just white voters. they create a bunch of laws that make it illegal to be black in the city. you have to have papers and things like that the 14th amendment is an attempt. military reconstruction, radical r
white landowners, white employers, there are also white employers and that north moving heaven and earth to get them to come north for it so there were subsidies to migrate. et cetera. they are countervailing forces, in a way. then, of, black: the south, many of them are very eager to get out. and so they found their way. i'm interested your comments on the way in which white supremacy and >> am interested in your comment and the way in which white supremacy and -- in the south created...
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30
Feb 19, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN2
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eye 30
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but i was particularly to the fact that i was a white reporter, white journalist writing about these issues, race. and so i was very careful, spend a lot of time with and not just this is true with white people. well, who i talk to but to make sure i was representing the way especially their family, the way that felt that accurate and authentic to them. so reviewing with them exactly what i was planning to say. you know, spending a lot of time, these were not just like one off interviews for the family, stories that were told. these many conversations over a long period of time. but let's move away the town and talk about the school. so how is all this affecting the school system and what are the parents and the children doing? what are they seeing in the school system as the town is going through all of these changes? right. so, you know, integration, the of black families is sort of spreading other neighborhoods. and in fact, one particular there was one neighborhood in shaker that did experience rapid white flight. it's called moreland. there were the school became overwhelmingly
but i was particularly to the fact that i was a white reporter, white journalist writing about these issues, race. and so i was very careful, spend a lot of time with and not just this is true with white people. well, who i talk to but to make sure i was representing the way especially their family, the way that felt that accurate and authentic to them. so reviewing with them exactly what i was planning to say. you know, spending a lot of time, these were not just like one off interviews for...
20
20
Feb 25, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 20
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white. in the second letter, she asked for a response. but how would she have received wouldn't it have been intercepted by her owner? it's a great question. the likelihood that lincoln didn't write a response to that letter. sadly, the annie davis there was some correspondence that enslaved people were able to send and receive before the civil war, although it was often very difficult because it could have been intercepted in this case her letter went throughout the bureaucracy wound up in some sort of federal agency and lincoln almost certainly never saw that one and never had the opportunity respond right thank you so much that. remember, let's hear more about this black delegation of august 1862 body. by the end of the first year of the war, lincoln had concluded that something had to be done about slavery, even though in his first inaugural address he did that he had no intention of doing anything about slavery and that he had no ability to do anything about slavery. but by the end that
white. in the second letter, she asked for a response. but how would she have received wouldn't it have been intercepted by her owner? it's a great question. the likelihood that lincoln didn't write a response to that letter. sadly, the annie davis there was some correspondence that enslaved people were able to send and receive before the civil war, although it was often very difficult because it could have been intercepted in this case her letter went throughout the bureaucracy wound up in...
107
107
Feb 9, 2024
02/24
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CNNW
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eye 107
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but, this white house right now, is is it the stance by this white house, that this report was issued in part with a motive and a goal to inflict political harm on the president? >> i heard the question the first time, and i'm just, i have nothing to object to him with the vice president said. i thought she was powerful and forceful. >> also just to follow-up, i'm sorry. this administration, as you said, you said that republicans often attacked prosecutors -- >> and i said that's created environment, where -- there is an incentive by the special counsel to include some of this language. but, often i've heard from democrats and this white house say that those attacks against independent systems can also sow distrust with the public, and those independent institutions. by saying that this is politically motivated, not just gratuitous, but politically motivated, does this not also sow distrust with the public? >> i reject that, i reject that question. you see this, and it's in the report, the letter that the president's lawyer and the white house counsel's office sent to the special coun
but, this white house right now, is is it the stance by this white house, that this report was issued in part with a motive and a goal to inflict political harm on the president? >> i heard the question the first time, and i'm just, i have nothing to object to him with the vice president said. i thought she was powerful and forceful. >> also just to follow-up, i'm sorry. this administration, as you said, you said that republicans often attacked prosecutors -- >> and i said...
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98
Feb 28, 2024
02/24
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 98
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so the "weak" is white people, make white women have more kids? there are seven dominionist belief system, that is the precursor to "the handmaid's tale." >> ♪ moment of joy ♪ [applause] >> greg: i already feel dum dumber. i borrowed this from dana. do you know that she's bald? tyrus, was she persuasive? >> tyrus: oh, yeah. she made me want to change the channel so fast. she's a racist, lonely, ugly person. i'm talking about on the inside. she had nothing better to do because, i hate to break it to her, i know it's black history month. we even have an extra day with the 29th coming up. don't you clap for that [bleep]. [laughter] i'm not having one month relegate my history, the col coldest, boring, shortest month. that's not the point. she said alabama was a slave state. i hate to break it to you, ma prayed they were all slave states. it's not like kansas was like, "not us!" they were all involved. the south wouldn't share the money. she's an angry person. no one should listen to anything she has to say. and why she's on tv, i have no idea. >> gre
so the "weak" is white people, make white women have more kids? there are seven dominionist belief system, that is the precursor to "the handmaid's tale." >> ♪ moment of joy ♪ [applause] >> greg: i already feel dum dumber. i borrowed this from dana. do you know that she's bald? tyrus, was she persuasive? >> tyrus: oh, yeah. she made me want to change the channel so fast. she's a racist, lonely, ugly person. i'm talking about on the inside. she had...
31
31
Feb 25, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 31
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white man for the benefit of the white man to be administered by white men in such manner as they should determine. that was douglass. he argued that the founders had intended that the declaration of independence was for white men only, and he often said, quote, am opposed to -- citizenship in any and every form. so that was primary democratic from the state of illinois. by contrast, in 1858, while he said times that he did not support or social equality the races he did insist that the declaration of was meant for all people and that people of african were, quote, equal in their right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. so lincoln is saying something very different. stephen douglass, at this time. but still, lincoln did not publicly come out against the black laws and a black abolitionist named h for douglass said in 1860, while he h for douglass was speaking critically of, leading republicans for being too accepting the existing constitutional order. the united states h. douglass said that two years earlier, in 1850, he had asked lincoln and lyman trumbull, another prominent
white man for the benefit of the white man to be administered by white men in such manner as they should determine. that was douglass. he argued that the founders had intended that the declaration of independence was for white men only, and he often said, quote, am opposed to -- citizenship in any and every form. so that was primary democratic from the state of illinois. by contrast, in 1858, while he said times that he did not support or social equality the races he did insist that the...
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83
Feb 13, 2024
02/24
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FBC
tv
eye 83
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white house insider telling axios these border crisis meetings under the biden white house they're not attended by agency chiefs or leaders. they're attended by deputies, congressman. how do you fix a problem with that. we've lost so much of national security and sovereignty with the open border and number within issue in the country and scrambling around and something the biden administration and actually takes seriously and looking for scape goads and border has to be controlled. people were afraid of what's coming and with all if you have indication. i'm urning my family, my con stitch junes, be ready for emergency. something big could happen and i think it's a matter of when not if. elizabeth: congressman babin of texas, thank you. still ahead, congressman de-especially ports of entry see toe and carl roth, new report top democrats ordering fellow democrats to stop talking about the president's age. it's "taboo but now senate democrats really worried he will lose because he's"too old. tonight in our second installment in our misleading america series, we take on dhs sec tourist may
white house insider telling axios these border crisis meetings under the biden white house they're not attended by agency chiefs or leaders. they're attended by deputies, congressman. how do you fix a problem with that. we've lost so much of national security and sovereignty with the open border and number within issue in the country and scrambling around and something the biden administration and actually takes seriously and looking for scape goads and border has to be controlled. people were...
32
32
Feb 21, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 32
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shortly after, the inauguration, biden swore in 206 white house staff that they saw that the white house staff was going to be in port and they worried about getting it. the senate confirm people through and what they focused on were the people in policy making positions who not confirmed and. so they filled those and by inauguration they had. 1100 non confirmed person. now the the risk in that though is that the department gets confirmed comes in and his staff is already there and he would like or she like to appoint their own people so you have some conflict there but they thought it was very right at the start to to get people in place and then with the nsc was was critical and jake sullivan had worked with with biden as had tony blinken and the two of them could work well together in the secretary of state and the white house positions coordinate on what's going to be an important part of that coordination is a great pivot process. and dave and chris have both mentioned process before. chris, in the book you talk about and i'm forgetting the exact phrase, something like on position c
shortly after, the inauguration, biden swore in 206 white house staff that they saw that the white house staff was going to be in port and they worried about getting it. the senate confirm people through and what they focused on were the people in policy making positions who not confirmed and. so they filled those and by inauguration they had. 1100 non confirmed person. now the the risk in that though is that the department gets confirmed comes in and his staff is already there and he would...
53
53
Feb 23, 2024
02/24
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CSPAN
tv
eye 53
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on white america. you have today worked karen's can just make up stuff or just lie on black folks especially black men and have the police called upon so they can go to jail, that is because white america is willing to believe it and eat it up. this is an indictment of white america,. this kind of stuff doesn't happen to other demographics in the united states other than black folks. no other demographic can point to injustices like this for black folks. guest: that's a profound statement. it happen 68 years ago and didn't have the impact it has now. i tell blacks at every turn when we made progress, there was some white authority fighting our ability to stand up. he's right. i remember in the chicago area, i saw something i never saw before. usually when something like that happens, there is a protest. we had diversity back then. we said this was a change. america has changed and we thank god for those people who see the light, the whites were willing to stand up and even the prosecutor in the emmett
on white america. you have today worked karen's can just make up stuff or just lie on black folks especially black men and have the police called upon so they can go to jail, that is because white america is willing to believe it and eat it up. this is an indictment of white america,. this kind of stuff doesn't happen to other demographics in the united states other than black folks. no other demographic can point to injustices like this for black folks. guest: that's a profound statement. it...