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Jul 16, 2020
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white house staffers are being taken by the army drivers with the white house staffers. presidents are trying to get a handle in the nixon administration became a union that led to watergate in the mitigation. the reason they were called the plumbers because they were designed from scratch week. they broke into the watergate themselves but the reason they started in the nickname because of leaks. there is a cat and mouse game between the administration and staffers on the leaking issue and there will always be technology leaking and noise technology identifying who the leakers are in the best way to address it is to have the president to make it clear in bringing people who are willing to not leaking against. i don't want to suggest all leaking is evil but sometimes administration will talk about a certain policy that they are making or personnel there picking up, this is necessarily designed to destroy and sometimes it's designed to get a policy between sunshine and air seek and assess whether he would be treated well by the american people. the leak has negative conden
white house staffers are being taken by the army drivers with the white house staffers. presidents are trying to get a handle in the nixon administration became a union that led to watergate in the mitigation. the reason they were called the plumbers because they were designed from scratch week. they broke into the watergate themselves but the reason they started in the nickname because of leaks. there is a cat and mouse game between the administration and staffers on the leaking issue and...
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Jul 18, 2020
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this commission against lack people is required for white people to have white privilege. that emma kratz did so much with desegregation and affirmative action has made it impossible for poor whites to have a white home and a white school at their low income which means they definitely need donald trump. that is what they were voting for. am i wrong? is there some hope for this , i'm assuming in 10 years hispanics will be white because white people are not fooled. that it's essential black people be the negative out party so that there is white consistency in this country? richard: it is certainly two sides of the same coin. you can have superiority without in -- without inferiority and vice versa. so white privilege does depend on black subjugation. the reality is, as you alluded to, poor whites are much more likely to be integrated into middle-class white communities then poor blacks are integrated into any community. we have lots of poor whites in this country and in metropolitan areas. we don't have white ghettos. they are mixed in with the broader population. so yes,
this commission against lack people is required for white people to have white privilege. that emma kratz did so much with desegregation and affirmative action has made it impossible for poor whites to have a white home and a white school at their low income which means they definitely need donald trump. that is what they were voting for. am i wrong? is there some hope for this , i'm assuming in 10 years hispanics will be white because white people are not fooled. that it's essential black...
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Jul 3, 2020
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intellectuals in the white house as well as emergency preparedness at the white house and the use of social media by presidents. so i hope you will take the time to listen, but also to think about buying this book. the fourth of july coming up we have presidents birthdays in the summer, anytime is a great time for loved ones learn more about the white house. karen skinner is in verse of action and scholarly repute she's worked most recently in the white house or the state department of director of policy and planning is served as another of white house or administration advisory and other roles as well as presidential campaign she is also the toby professor and director of the institute of strategy carnegie melon university. there she studies presidency she's written books on ronald ragan in foreign policy as well. we have a great lineup today what were going to do is jump into the meats of the book we want you to get a little sense of what's in the book part of the key points that i want to hear some of her thoughts will have conversation and then we will turn to you prudhomme menti
intellectuals in the white house as well as emergency preparedness at the white house and the use of social media by presidents. so i hope you will take the time to listen, but also to think about buying this book. the fourth of july coming up we have presidents birthdays in the summer, anytime is a great time for loved ones learn more about the white house. karen skinner is in verse of action and scholarly repute she's worked most recently in the white house or the state department of director...
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Jul 19, 2020
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he changed it to the white house. david: linda, what is the fondest memory of your father being president? when you think back on those years, what do you enjoy the most, or what is the best memory you have about it? linda: i think when he went to the congress and asked them, it was bipartisan, he went and asked them to pass massive civil rights legislation. and i'm -- [applause] david: that wasn't easy for somebody whose best friends in the senate were not in favor of it, and had come from texas. why did he decide he wanted to do that? linda: he knew it was the right thing. before he represented texas, he represented his constituency. time had changed. and he personally knew of discrimination. he'd seen it, not just with people who were african-american, but for instance, when he was the senator, our phone number was in the regular phone book, and he got a call, a hispanic in texas, has been killed -- i believe he was killed in korea. the local funeral home in texas, refused to take his body. they said, that if they
he changed it to the white house. david: linda, what is the fondest memory of your father being president? when you think back on those years, what do you enjoy the most, or what is the best memory you have about it? linda: i think when he went to the congress and asked them, it was bipartisan, he went and asked them to pass massive civil rights legislation. and i'm -- [applause] david: that wasn't easy for somebody whose best friends in the senate were not in favor of it, and had come from...
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Jul 8, 2020
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create their white house staff. that the cabinet officers are in charge of the respective areas but then they were setting up policy. this is your area you handle it. that said i do highlight a couple of instances where you do have the cabinet secretaries meeting with white house staffers in a way that was different. so in the truman administration and to fly in the face today that such one - - not such a cultural proposition but it was a big ?-question-mark at the time including george marshall who is not only a war hero but also secretary of state and revered more than anyone else in public life. and then to recognize the white house meeting where he would be against marshall. he was not that interested in said what we are doing here but he said he is here to help. and john foster dulles who is secretary of state. and then to negotiate on the arms deal. the new york time when they came on board and he was causally trying to undercut. and then to have women to run afoul of the cabinet secretary. >> so another thing
create their white house staff. that the cabinet officers are in charge of the respective areas but then they were setting up policy. this is your area you handle it. that said i do highlight a couple of instances where you do have the cabinet secretaries meeting with white house staffers in a way that was different. so in the truman administration and to fly in the face today that such one - - not such a cultural proposition but it was a big ?-question-mark at the time including george...
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Jul 7, 2020
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and you worked in the white house and you know how she worked with him in that white house office, and the departments that were there, thanks to leadership with you and armstrong that were very conscious of this's movement and mrs. nixon, politically astute, realized republicans or losing some ground and democrats were proposing legislation built to support women and she worked very closely with the office of women's issues and the white house to help get more appointments of women in the federal government, and as you said she spoke publicly about women. she was disappointed that was not the president's decision and discuss that pprivately. again, that was her character and the appropriate way to do it, but she was responding to what was going on in the country. >> can you come up in and join us? we have a chair up front for you. >> make no mistake about it, she was what i would call quietly politically astute. she was not about to brag about what she could do were not do. she was very quiet about her sophistication in terms of doing things appropriately politically. >> the times she
and you worked in the white house and you know how she worked with him in that white house office, and the departments that were there, thanks to leadership with you and armstrong that were very conscious of this's movement and mrs. nixon, politically astute, realized republicans or losing some ground and democrats were proposing legislation built to support women and she worked very closely with the office of women's issues and the white house to help get more appointments of women in the...
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Jul 2, 2020
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white house for the summer. that's when tragedy struck. we'll learn more about what happened with the next video. >> let's head into the vault where we keep specific things about the coolidge family. grace coolidge early life, before married to kelvin. as well as documents about her family specifically children and gayle grandchildren. she was a loving wife and mother. we have wonderful correspondence that documents that. and i teen 22 grace wrote to the head of the academy were both persons were, and she writes, is there a way that we can arrange for calvin junior to have a soft boiled eggs for breakfast at a time that would be inconvenient. he just had a surgery and chris was concern about his health. this was written in 1924, like many sons he talks about his schooling, which wasn't going too well. his clothing that needed to be updated because he's going out of it, and his plans for traveling back to washington d.c. to visit his moment at. the letter reads i hope you are well and happy, i know you're, happy
white house for the summer. that's when tragedy struck. we'll learn more about what happened with the next video. >> let's head into the vault where we keep specific things about the coolidge family. grace coolidge early life, before married to kelvin. as well as documents about her family specifically children and gayle grandchildren. she was a loving wife and mother. we have wonderful correspondence that documents that. and i teen 22 grace wrote to the head of the academy were both...
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Jul 26, 2020
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white house. so the first two presidents look at are truman and eisenhower and the both are the first two presidents who start with a white house staff. had to think how to create their white house staff, wanted to have a structure and boast both of them for the most part believe in cabinet government. the cabinet officers are in charge of the respective areas and the white house staff can help the president, can help guide, put really is the cabinet ofs setting policy and eisenhower was known to tell cabinet officer who came to women if problems and he would say this is your yeah, you work it out. i point out where you did have cabinet secretaries kind of butting heads with white house staffer or people delegated by the president in a way that was different from what the cabinet government would seem to entail. one story i tell in the truman administration is that truman was facing the issue of whether to recognize israel. today that's not such a controversial proposition because it's a close al
white house. so the first two presidents look at are truman and eisenhower and the both are the first two presidents who start with a white house staff. had to think how to create their white house staff, wanted to have a structure and boast both of them for the most part believe in cabinet government. the cabinet officers are in charge of the respective areas and the white house staff can help the president, can help guide, put really is the cabinet ofs setting policy and eisenhower was known...
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Jul 3, 2020
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>> yes. >> at the white house itself? >> mrs.lt was at a luncheon, they went and got her and didn't tell her anything. steve early told her when she got to the white house, the press secretary. they knew roosevelt was going. >> no one suspected so quickly. >> i think it was an issue of when. >> 82 days. >> of when. he looked horrible the last campaign. he many spoken to the congress sitting down. he was ashen and his inaugural address for the fourth term had to be given from the white house. he stood up on the south portico, and the audience was out front. it was not really a surprise to anyone. >> two hours later, in the cabinet room at the white house, harry truman joined by his family took the oath of office delivered by chief justice harland stone. how surprised was the nation? did they know who harry truman was? >> no, they knew he was vice president, they knew his name. he had gotten some acclaim for his truman committee. he was an admired senator within washington. the general public was like who is harry truman? even his
>> yes. >> at the white house itself? >> mrs.lt was at a luncheon, they went and got her and didn't tell her anything. steve early told her when she got to the white house, the press secretary. they knew roosevelt was going. >> no one suspected so quickly. >> i think it was an issue of when. >> 82 days. >> of when. he looked horrible the last campaign. he many spoken to the congress sitting down. he was ashen and his inaugural address for the fourth...
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supremacy as we have to put it on another white person well it's the white russia it's the white communists it's the russians who were behind dr king they were real big and so there always has to be this in the various liberal white person behind the scenes in order to make the white supremacist feel better about back that black people out here in the streets making a change even through the haitian revolution they didn't want to believe that it was the haitians who rules up against the white. purposes they have to say well it was them it's the overweight people doing is this white abolitionists who is behind this so in the mind of a white supremacist they always have to find a white super villain behind the scenes orchestrating everything to make them go better about getting. justice from whack people. right and again let me kind of return to a theme here because what you're saying and your documentaries dig into this it is providing a broader context for a conceit of american politics which would come under the heading of white supremacy just and that's not something people want to confro
supremacy as we have to put it on another white person well it's the white russia it's the white communists it's the russians who were behind dr king they were real big and so there always has to be this in the various liberal white person behind the scenes in order to make the white supremacist feel better about back that black people out here in the streets making a change even through the haitian revolution they didn't want to believe that it was the haitians who rules up against the white....
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Jul 26, 2020
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no offense to my white crew members. here's the problem with white people.ept for these one, two, three, four. five. yeah, five. yeah. he's from alabama. so i don't even think of him as being white. as a black man, every video, michael brown, eric garner, philando castile, i'm seeing myself in that. >> mm-hmm. >> even if i've never been in that situation. so, when eric garner is on the ground being choked out by cops and saying "i can't breathe" and i find out he has asthma and people are like, he's a 6'4" black man with asthma, i'm a 6'4" black man with asthma. while people don't see white people in these videos and see themselves. we've had enough of these videos now of white women where we're like you must have seen the other videos. you'd think in that moment you'd be, like, white a minute, am i about to get a hashtag with a name that's not mine? >> no, they don't. white people also see groups with people of color and they see individuals for white people. that's just their m.o. but it's nice to see that these stories are aggregated because that kind of
no offense to my white crew members. here's the problem with white people.ept for these one, two, three, four. five. yeah, five. yeah. he's from alabama. so i don't even think of him as being white. as a black man, every video, michael brown, eric garner, philando castile, i'm seeing myself in that. >> mm-hmm. >> even if i've never been in that situation. so, when eric garner is on the ground being choked out by cops and saying "i can't breathe" and i find out he has...
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Jul 6, 2020
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you see here the white house. and a picture of mrs. during her televised taping, a color still picture taken showing her the blue room. one of the things the president talked about was how many people had come to visit. they had 1.3 million people in the year 1961. so it wasn't so much that the tour kicked off the interest in the white house, mrs. kennedy had already attracted the public attention. she was -- she got early in 1961 congress to pass the law that she mentioned which didn't just protect the collection but established that the museum character of the public rooms of white house must be maintained in perpetuity and the secret service has a lot of say about the security issues, but the museum character was what she was so interested in grasping. then she created the curators office also in 1961, with the idea that you needed a professional staff there to collect and preserve and interpret and conserve the pieces that she found in the house and the things that she was adding to the house. we actually have the dichotomy in our
you see here the white house. and a picture of mrs. during her televised taping, a color still picture taken showing her the blue room. one of the things the president talked about was how many people had come to visit. they had 1.3 million people in the year 1961. so it wasn't so much that the tour kicked off the interest in the white house, mrs. kennedy had already attracted the public attention. she was -- she got early in 1961 congress to pass the law that she mentioned which didn't just...
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a national group of individuals organizing white people for racial justice. >> i think some white people get stuck in the idea, if we just israel go develop a good heart, good intentions, that's enough. while that's a critical part of the journaly as our own journey of change, if we are not pushing against structural and institutional racism, then we're just better hearted people and things will not change for people of color in this community. >> the east oakland activist john jones iii gives people this advice. >> start with organizing in your own community, in your own neighborhood. organize your family members, your co-workers. use your privilege. they have a level of assets that we as black people and people of color do not have. >> she trains people how to be allies and says the key come possibly is action. >> we have to figure out what we're going to do. what we're going to incorporate in our lives. what we're going to change. in particular, we need people who are not part of oppressed groups. we need people who are white. who historically held power. what folks really want to see
a national group of individuals organizing white people for racial justice. >> i think some white people get stuck in the idea, if we just israel go develop a good heart, good intentions, that's enough. while that's a critical part of the journaly as our own journey of change, if we are not pushing against structural and institutional racism, then we're just better hearted people and things will not change for people of color in this community. >> the east oakland activist john...
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Jul 3, 2020
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they so enjoyed the white house.her women friends were very dear to her and she kept many of her friendships during her entire life. >> here is pat invented mississippi. you are on the air. >> that's in michigan. >> offensive michigan, sorry. >> we had the pleasure of going to independence and during the house. we had to go and through the back door just like the family. seeing the presidential library which we really enjoyed. my question is about the true man's -- tremendous financial circumstances. it was controversial that she was paid, perhaps they needed the money. certainly the president was the reason that congress has established a pension for retiring presidents. i wonder if their financial circumstances might have led them not to do is much entertaining and so forth as previous presidents who had their own budgets. >> absolutely. financial reasons were why he does put bess on the payroll. margaret truman always described her mother as a penny pincher but margaret all so admitted it was a good thing she did.
they so enjoyed the white house.her women friends were very dear to her and she kept many of her friendships during her entire life. >> here is pat invented mississippi. you are on the air. >> that's in michigan. >> offensive michigan, sorry. >> we had the pleasure of going to independence and during the house. we had to go and through the back door just like the family. seeing the presidential library which we really enjoyed. my question is about the true man's --...
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Jul 7, 2020
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nixon how the white house had been improved. she said there were no dark corners anymore in the white house, that she would done a beautiful job. and she also complimented their ability raising the two lovely daughters that you have and that she was -- she said to raise young women like that who are in the public eye their entire lives is a very difficult thing to do, and you did a beautiful job. and she was so happy her children got to meet the nixon's children. >> there's a portrait of pat nixon. tell us about that. >> well, it's a very poignant, extremely beautiful portrait i think. and it was painted out in san clemente in 1978 and he went out to paint her in the house, mrs. nixon there. but i have a quote from a note sent to julie about her impression of her mother while she was painting this portrait, and i'd like to read a little bit of it because it's so -- i think so beautifully provocative about who mrs. nixon was. she said above the bridge of a nose that's almost greek your mother has eyes that are like no one els. th
nixon how the white house had been improved. she said there were no dark corners anymore in the white house, that she would done a beautiful job. and she also complimented their ability raising the two lovely daughters that you have and that she was -- she said to raise young women like that who are in the public eye their entire lives is a very difficult thing to do, and you did a beautiful job. and she was so happy her children got to meet the nixon's children. >> there's a portrait of...
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Jul 16, 2020
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it's true only one in four white southern families own slaves but if we also get the number of white southerners who hope to own slaves, who worked with or for slaveowners, who had slaveowners in a families and so on. we see that a broad majority of a white southerners in seceded states believed to have a stake in slavery as a system of profit and social control. and white southern propagandist secessionist, propaganda that led them to believe that the north was a threat to their own well-being and then an end to t racial control was tragically very effective. >> we have time for one more question. but you mention the south carolina secession broadside here our question actually has two copies of the and viewers can go to our website and view more information about those in what they say. hours are broadsides and quite large but they're very interesting to look at. our final question today comes from kelly, kelly wants to know how many confederate soldiers defected or switched sides to fight for the north? >> so that's a good question. i have a figure you know, that i could quote rig
it's true only one in four white southern families own slaves but if we also get the number of white southerners who hope to own slaves, who worked with or for slaveowners, who had slaveowners in a families and so on. we see that a broad majority of a white southerners in seceded states believed to have a stake in slavery as a system of profit and social control. and white southern propagandist secessionist, propaganda that led them to believe that the north was a threat to their own well-being...
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Jul 10, 2020
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>> did you work out out in the white house? >> i worked out in the white house.and had a trainer that came to the gym and up stairs and my sister-in-law margaret came and always worked out with me. and at the very end, the last couple of years after i think maybe the last year i had a yoga instructor come and that's what i do now. >> you do yoga here in dallas at a class? >> i have an instructor that comes to my house. >> makes it easier? >> makes it easier, yeah. >> mrs. bush, you were also involved in education as an issue, no child left behind. has that been a successful program? >> i think it has been really successful. i think the important part of it is just the recognition that -- that it is really a civil rights issue, that the kids who do get left behind are the ones who are in the poorest parts of towns, the ones whose parents don't speak english, the ones who are -- they are the ones who get shuffled through. and that's why it's very important to have accountability, to know how every child is doing. and that's the part that of course a lot of people c
>> did you work out out in the white house? >> i worked out in the white house.and had a trainer that came to the gym and up stairs and my sister-in-law margaret came and always worked out with me. and at the very end, the last couple of years after i think maybe the last year i had a yoga instructor come and that's what i do now. >> you do yoga here in dallas at a class? >> i have an instructor that comes to my house. >> makes it easier? >> makes it easier,...
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white guilt or writing a check for white privilege this anti-racism training manual leads one to buy into a whole new system of white supremacy where white people are the only ones with agency and black americans are no more than victims plus new research suggests anti-bias training combat fire because training whether consciously or subconsciously activates stereotypes and wait for jodi is in the end a book about how to make certain educated white readers feel better about themselves white readers or white guilt seminar attendees will know they've done something meaningful by examining how much they as white people suck and then decide they don't need to do anything really tangible to help anyone volunteer races the profit of white guilt d'angelo says in her book wanting to jump over the hard personal work and get to solutions is the foundation of white for jodi solutions are racist and action is racist how convenient for corporate america and companies like amazon that they don't need to think about discriminatory hiring practices or a living wage for black employees racism can be
white guilt or writing a check for white privilege this anti-racism training manual leads one to buy into a whole new system of white supremacy where white people are the only ones with agency and black americans are no more than victims plus new research suggests anti-bias training combat fire because training whether consciously or subconsciously activates stereotypes and wait for jodi is in the end a book about how to make certain educated white readers feel better about themselves white...
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Jul 7, 2020
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nixon invited him to the white house. and they walked through all of the rooms from the third floor down to the ground floor, through the private quarters and the state rooms. and he thought about it for a few days and decided to accept it. and she was a very strong supporter of this program. the rooms had been last refurbished in the early '60s, in the kennedy administration, but there had been tremendous visitation, tremendous receptions and a lot of crowds in the '60s. and things really needed to take shape. and clem conger was a very energetic, ambitious person who knew how to raise funds and appeal to donors and mrs. nixon would often write letters to donors and have receptions and teas for people that were potential donors or museums that might lend objects, such as the dolley madison portrait by gilbert stewart that belonged to the pennsylvania academy of the fine arts, which was hung in 1971. and then it was finally purchased by the association here for the collection. but she was a big supporter. she, in fact, di
nixon invited him to the white house. and they walked through all of the rooms from the third floor down to the ground floor, through the private quarters and the state rooms. and he thought about it for a few days and decided to accept it. and she was a very strong supporter of this program. the rooms had been last refurbished in the early '60s, in the kennedy administration, but there had been tremendous visitation, tremendous receptions and a lot of crowds in the '60s. and things really...
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Jul 26, 2020
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white flight was possible because there were white places to flee to. if we had not imposed residential segregation in suburbs, there could not have been white flight because every neighborhood would have had a diverse population. a lot of these things that we think of as being purely private rest on government policy. let me take a minute to go into one other, if i may, example of this. deis a big explanation for real estateation, families to the same race neighborhood. i would never suggest that just because someone is licensed by a state, they would be a state actor. if that were the case, everybody in the country would be a state actor. it would completely implode the distinction between public and private. the real estate agents are a different kind of state involvement. since 19 24, the national association of real estate boards has a code of ethics, which stated explicitly that real estate agents cannot sell a home in a white neighborhood to an african-american. this is not a rogue real estate agent happening to steer people. ofs is the official
white flight was possible because there were white places to flee to. if we had not imposed residential segregation in suburbs, there could not have been white flight because every neighborhood would have had a diverse population. a lot of these things that we think of as being purely private rest on government policy. let me take a minute to go into one other, if i may, example of this. deis a big explanation for real estateation, families to the same race neighborhood. i would never suggest...
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Jul 4, 2020
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the dinner set is white embossed with gold.hey had a tea set that was blue, and they had a dessert set in green. you'll often read that mrs. polk didn't allow alcohol in the white house, that her presbyterian upbringing precluded that from happening. it's not exactly the case. she stopped the serving of whiskey punches at public levees in the polk white house but wine was one of their largest bills during their years there. one of the more interesting objects in the collection sort of speaks to sarah and her ability with music as well. we have a music book that has handwritten notations and one of the songs featured inside is the song "hail to the chief," which she of course is credited with starting as the official presidential anthem during her time as first lady. [end video clip] susan: i wanted to ask about that "hail to the chief" because a little controversy has erupted between our last program with the tylers who are also claiming that they introduced "hail to the chief," and the polks who as you can see make it part of
the dinner set is white embossed with gold.hey had a tea set that was blue, and they had a dessert set in green. you'll often read that mrs. polk didn't allow alcohol in the white house, that her presbyterian upbringing precluded that from happening. it's not exactly the case. she stopped the serving of whiskey punches at public levees in the polk white house but wine was one of their largest bills during their years there. one of the more interesting objects in the collection sort of speaks to...
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Jul 6, 2020
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what did he do in the white house?> he taped his telephone conversations as eisenhower and roosevelt had a little bit -- kennedy had a little bit more, but johnson, about 650 hours over 5 years and taped people in most cases without their knowledge which would include jacqueline kennedy whom at that point had a very good relationship more or less with lbj but i think she would not have been too thrilled to know he was having this call taped. >> this is a phone conversation with ten days after the death of her husband. jacqueline kennedy and the new president, lyndon johnson. let's listen. >> first thing you got to learn, you have some things to learn. one of them is you don't bother me, you give me strength. >> i wasn't going to -- >> don't send me anything. you just come over and put your arm around me, that's all we do. when you haven't got anything else to do, let's take a walk and let's walk around the backyard and let me tell you how much you mean to all of us and how we can carry on if you give us a little streng
what did he do in the white house?> he taped his telephone conversations as eisenhower and roosevelt had a little bit -- kennedy had a little bit more, but johnson, about 650 hours over 5 years and taped people in most cases without their knowledge which would include jacqueline kennedy whom at that point had a very good relationship more or less with lbj but i think she would not have been too thrilled to know he was having this call taped. >> this is a phone conversation with ten...
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Jul 8, 2020
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i grew up in georgia and to watch them go to the white house and for amy to grow up in the white house. it was -- it was a really exciting thing to watch if you were a kid. and she seemed right there in the center of all of the events and i remember thinking about that a lot as something that was really exciting. >> as a mother with a young child in the white house, how did she approach protecting young amy from the press, the public interest, that sort of thing? we have a photograph right here, it looks like kind of like coming down the stairs from the blair house, and you can see how young she is. how did they approach parenting? >> well, i think that they felt that all their kids should be able to have a private life if they wanted to, and amy certainly did. you know, if you're a kid in the first family, you've got secret service protection, so it's a little hard to just blend in, even if you'd like to. but i think the press in general respected that, you know, and realized that a child shouldn't be exposed to, you know, the kind of press that their parents, you know, get. so, you k
i grew up in georgia and to watch them go to the white house and for amy to grow up in the white house. it was -- it was a really exciting thing to watch if you were a kid. and she seemed right there in the center of all of the events and i remember thinking about that a lot as something that was really exciting. >> as a mother with a young child in the white house, how did she approach protecting young amy from the press, the public interest, that sort of thing? we have a photograph...
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Jul 16, 2020
07/20
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the white house spokesperson says the op-ed did not go through normal white house clearancerocesses andthe opinion of peter alone. the president also responded. >>et that is per navarro. i have a very good relationship with dr. fauci. there has never been a time when two candidates were so different. >> all this is president trump is behind in many polls and faces fierce criticism over his own response to the covid-19 and yesterday, what was billed as an official white house news conference quickly morphed into a campaign style event. the president spent 63 minutes, mostly criticizing hne november op joe biden. he mentioned biden by name some 30 times. he hit the former vice president on a range of issues. >> joe biden and president oma freely allowed china to pillage our factories, plunder our communities. to jobs. >> america lost near 10,000 factories while joereiden was vicesident. think of that. 10,000 factories. >> to the paris climate agreement. >> vice president biden was a leading advocate of the paris climate accord, which was unbelievably expensive to our country. >> biden cam
the white house spokesperson says the op-ed did not go through normal white house clearancerocesses andthe opinion of peter alone. the president also responded. >>et that is per navarro. i have a very good relationship with dr. fauci. there has never been a time when two candidates were so different. >> all this is president trump is behind in many polls and faces fierce criticism over his own response to the covid-19 and yesterday, what was billed as an official white house news...
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Jul 15, 2020
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in a tweet, white house the op-ed "didn't go throughid normal white house clearan processes and is the opinion of peter alone." the president also responded: >> that's peter navarro, but i have a very good relationship with dr. fci. so there's never been a time when two candidates o different. >> alcindor: all this, as president trump is behind in many polls and faces fierce to covid-19. his own response and, yesterday, what was billed as an official white house news conference quickly morphed into campaign-style event. utthe president spent 63 m mostly criticizing his november opponent joe biden. he mentioned biden by name some 30 times.th he hit aformer vice president on a range of issues, from china... >> joe biden and president obama freely allowed china to pillage our factories, plunder our communities. >> alcindor: to jobs...ca >> ameost nearly 10,000 factories while joe biden was vice president. think of that: 10,000 factories. >> alcindor: to the paris climate agreement. >>s vice president, biden was a leading advocate of the paris climate accord, which unbelievably expensive t
in a tweet, white house the op-ed "didn't go throughid normal white house clearan processes and is the opinion of peter alone." the president also responded: >> that's peter navarro, but i have a very good relationship with dr. fci. so there's never been a time when two candidates o different. >> alcindor: all this, as president trump is behind in many polls and faces fierce to covid-19. his own response and, yesterday, what was billed as an official white house news...
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Jul 7, 2020
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house, nixon white house in many ways was a model of the modern white house in the television age. white house decided how the presidential family would be used or not used. and we -- i hope we'll get into this a little bit more -- but pat nixon did not have the opportunity to control as much as she would've liked the way in which she was presented to the american people. >> and was this precedent-setting, the first white house to go to this extreme with media? >> no, i mean, after all, the kennedy white house had thought a lot about jackie, and the very fact that jacqueline kennedy went to dallas, she was going to dallas because the president knew he needed her help in what was supposed to be just a political tour. >> no, this was not the first time. jacqueline kennedy was really the first. eleanor roosevelt, of course, thought about her own public role, but she pushed that. i mean, i'd say that she's unilaterally responsible for that. the roosevelt white house wasn't pushing her in front. >> i think jackie kennedy is really the first first lady that is part of a media strategy. p
house, nixon white house in many ways was a model of the modern white house in the television age. white house decided how the presidential family would be used or not used. and we -- i hope we'll get into this a little bit more -- but pat nixon did not have the opportunity to control as much as she would've liked the way in which she was presented to the american people. >> and was this precedent-setting, the first white house to go to this extreme with media? >> no, i mean, after...
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Jul 19, 2020
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a white honky who slides down a black chimney and comes out white.plause] brian: i have to say that last remark was interesting. white honky who slides down a black chimney, comes out white. rep. lewis: there's a lot of rhetoric and there's a lot of playing on words and very emotional. brian: did it work? rep. lewis: and that was not -- that was not part of the sncc that i knew. brian: what happened? rep. lewis: something went wrong. sncc came to that point where, in my estimation, it was forced to die a natural death. we were conceived in this whole idea of the building of a truly interracial democracy. there were black students and white students, working together, building together, suffering together. you cannot forget that in 1964, one year after i became chair, during the mississippi summer project, that we recruited all these young people, blacks and whites, primarily students, but lawyers and doctors and priests and nuns came to work in mississippi during the voter registration drive. that state had a black vote in each population of more tha
a white honky who slides down a black chimney and comes out white.plause] brian: i have to say that last remark was interesting. white honky who slides down a black chimney, comes out white. rep. lewis: there's a lot of rhetoric and there's a lot of playing on words and very emotional. brian: did it work? rep. lewis: and that was not -- that was not part of the sncc that i knew. brian: what happened? rep. lewis: something went wrong. sncc came to that point where, in my estimation, it was...
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Jul 20, 2020
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amount of that in the white house. there also been leaks that have been incredibly damaging i've a whole chapter on this. does seem transcripts of world leaders leak and tired transcripts on the pages of newspapers. that is annera extraordinary breach of security breach. he had a right to be outraged by that. the president should be able to have a conversation with world leaders without thinking this entire conversation is going to be splash one the pages of the "washington post". a lot comes from the president's own top aides. who knows where those came from they could have been career officials and previous administrations. and let's face it, the president himself as someone in to talk to qualitatively different to veryky leaky white house we are now in chief of staff four, every chief of staff are setting out to stop the leaks and none have been successful present on twitter says make america great again pray the president looking at the try to help portland not hurt it, they're losing control of the agitators they
amount of that in the white house. there also been leaks that have been incredibly damaging i've a whole chapter on this. does seem transcripts of world leaders leak and tired transcripts on the pages of newspapers. that is annera extraordinary breach of security breach. he had a right to be outraged by that. the president should be able to have a conversation with world leaders without thinking this entire conversation is going to be splash one the pages of the "washington post". a...
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Jul 15, 2020
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anthony fauci, the white house appears to be waving the white flag at least for now. >> we have a very good relationship. well that is peter navarro. i have a very good relationship with dr. fauci. >> reporter: president trump and his top aides are backing off of their attacks on fauci but only white house trade adviser peter navarro blasted fauci in a "usa today" op-ed writing dr. anthony fauci has a good bedside manner with the public but he has been wrong about everything i've interacted with him on. asked about that the president all but accused navarro of going rogue. >> well, he made a statement representing himself. he shouldn't be doing that. no, i have a very good relationship with anthony. >> reporter: after biting his tongue for weeks, fauci is now defending himself. >> i cannot figure out in my wildest dreams why they would want to do that, but, i mean, i think they realize now that that was not a prudent thing to do because it's only reflecting negatively on them. i can't explain peter navarro. he is in a world by himself. i don't even want to go there. >> reporter: navarr
anthony fauci, the white house appears to be waving the white flag at least for now. >> we have a very good relationship. well that is peter navarro. i have a very good relationship with dr. fauci. >> reporter: president trump and his top aides are backing off of their attacks on fauci but only white house trade adviser peter navarro blasted fauci in a "usa today" op-ed writing dr. anthony fauci has a good bedside manner with the public but he has been wrong about...
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Jul 8, 2020
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and initially, that terrified people in the white house.fter the "60 minutes" interview, the president said, he says jokingly, you've lost me, 10, no 20 million votes. it was only a few days later when the first polls came in and the people in the white house were astonished that in fact, there was an overwhelming 70% of those who were polled sympathized with the first lady's candor, if not necessarily her specific views. >> here's the first lady herself talking about the equal rights amendment to the constitution and urging its ratification. >> the equal rights amendment, when ratified, will not be an instant solution to women's problems. it will not alter the fabric of the constitution or force women away from their families. it will help knock down those restrictions that have locked women in to the old stereotypes of behavior and opportunity. it will help open up more options for women. but it is only the beginning. the debate over e.r.a. has become too emotional because of the fears of some, both men and women, about the changes alread
and initially, that terrified people in the white house.fter the "60 minutes" interview, the president said, he says jokingly, you've lost me, 10, no 20 million votes. it was only a few days later when the first polls came in and the people in the white house were astonished that in fact, there was an overwhelming 70% of those who were polled sympathized with the first lady's candor, if not necessarily her specific views. >> here's the first lady herself talking about the equal...
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Jul 8, 2020
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go to the white house. and then after that, the ladies got to go to see the congress, which you just mentioned, they were discussing the panama canal treaty. and it was just a great event. but that night, it was so -- it was just so wonderful, being at the white house and meeting with all the -- and it was a governors' meeting as well.and then, we had done campaigning for president carter through some of the towns in alabama along with tammy wynette. and it was just a wonderful event, and we just really loved president carter and mrs. carter. and they were just so gracious. >> thanks very much. well, we learned that her interest in the arts was much broader than just southern music, and national. but did they, in fact, reach out to that constituency as well? >> well, it was interesting during the campaign, again, the expansion of the media during this time, a lot of musicians from the south endorsed carter's campaign. and i think most interestingly. and perhaps forgotten today, southern rock was really at i
go to the white house. and then after that, the ladies got to go to see the congress, which you just mentioned, they were discussing the panama canal treaty. and it was just a great event. but that night, it was so -- it was just so wonderful, being at the white house and meeting with all the -- and it was a governors' meeting as well.and then, we had done campaigning for president carter through some of the towns in alabama along with tammy wynette. and it was just a wonderful event, and we...
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Jul 7, 2020
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house, to loan pieces to the white house. they went out and sought out people to donate the money to be able to get the proper pieces to fill the room. >> she had always been very interested in decorating. she had decorated a number of their homes. so this was something that was very important to her and not something that was widely known. they didn't publicize this. it was kind of like she was doing it for a while before anybody realized that she was doing it. >> and then, when jackie comes, jackie says, oh, this is all wonderful. and she really tried to give the credit to other people, rather than giving -- than taking it herself. >> when pat nixon came to the white house, one-third of the furnishings were antiques. when she left the white house, two-thirds of them were antiques. but some viewers might not know this -- dolley madison is famous for saving the canvas of george washington in 1814. well, she actually saved two canvasses. the other one was a portrait of herself. and pat nixon brought it back to the white house.
house, to loan pieces to the white house. they went out and sought out people to donate the money to be able to get the proper pieces to fill the room. >> she had always been very interested in decorating. she had decorated a number of their homes. so this was something that was very important to her and not something that was widely known. they didn't publicize this. it was kind of like she was doing it for a while before anybody realized that she was doing it. >> and then, when...
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Jul 20, 2020
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is white supremacy.hite supremacy is a big complicated web of systems and institutions set up to keep power and privilege with one race. guess which one? ♪ ♪ pittsburgh is a paradox. it is known as steel town usa but the factories that came with that name are mostly gone. it's a progressive, liberal city, but in the heart of deep midwestern, pa. industrial city, but also a booming intellectual and technology hub. it is america's most livable city, one of the safest, most affordable cities, a what in the name of pittsburgh's mr. rogers is going on? the paradox of a seven times higher infant mortality rate for black babies over white babies, or a safe, livable city versus deadliest attack on jewish people in our nation's history at the tree of life synagogue means that in pittsburgh, like in american, the history and structure of white supremacy has us living two totally separate realities. you know, existing while black in pittsburgh is live starving to death while in the supermarket aisle. okay, i didn't
is white supremacy.hite supremacy is a big complicated web of systems and institutions set up to keep power and privilege with one race. guess which one? ♪ ♪ pittsburgh is a paradox. it is known as steel town usa but the factories that came with that name are mostly gone. it's a progressive, liberal city, but in the heart of deep midwestern, pa. industrial city, but also a booming intellectual and technology hub. it is america's most livable city, one of the safest, most affordable cities,...
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Jul 6, 2020
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mamie's love of fashion did not begin in the white house.rom the mid 1920s shows her love of fashion. she was about 30 years old, too old to be considered a flapper, but still very stylish for the day. let's go take a look at some of the exhibits that focus mamie's style. mamie was well known for her trademark hairstyle. the special bangs were called the mamie look and you could even purchase fake bangs to clip into your hair at all the drugstores in the 1950s. mamie would go to the elizabeth arden salons to get her hair don and elizabeth arden had one of her hairstylists create these drawings so mamie cowell take them with her so if she had to go to another stylist, her hair would always be perfect. >> okay, you are on. this series is called influence and image, how much did she influence american women's looks in the 1950s? >> oh, she was extremely popular. she set off a rage for pink. she set off a rage for bangs. everybody wanted to look like mamie. it seems a little strange to us post-jacqueline kennedy, but she really epitomized the be
mamie's love of fashion did not begin in the white house.rom the mid 1920s shows her love of fashion. she was about 30 years old, too old to be considered a flapper, but still very stylish for the day. let's go take a look at some of the exhibits that focus mamie's style. mamie was well known for her trademark hairstyle. the special bangs were called the mamie look and you could even purchase fake bangs to clip into your hair at all the drugstores in the 1950s. mamie would go to the elizabeth...
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Jul 6, 2020
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whites alongside blacks.hanged the evening news as we know it. >> by the fall of 1963 cbs first went to 30 minutes and huntley brinkley went to 30 minutes. >> these make possible the expansion of the famed hunktley brinkley report to a full half hour. >> this was in the peak of the civil rights era. >> the explosion of tension brought new recruits into the movement, mostly black and white. >> we are hopeful something will come out of the summit. >> what areas will your movement be in? >> voter registration and freedom schools. >> one of these was bob moses. >> sncc. the whole campaign was stanford and yale. >> we have been invited and simply helping people. >> students representing the elite structures of our country. >> i really believe in these things. it may sound idealistic, the constitution and bill of rights. >> it was clear at the orientation that the media were latching on to every little white girl they could find who would post a picture back home. that's what interested the press and brought the pr
whites alongside blacks.hanged the evening news as we know it. >> by the fall of 1963 cbs first went to 30 minutes and huntley brinkley went to 30 minutes. >> these make possible the expansion of the famed hunktley brinkley report to a full half hour. >> this was in the peak of the civil rights era. >> the explosion of tension brought new recruits into the movement, mostly black and white. >> we are hopeful something will come out of the summit. >> what areas...
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about how to make certain educated white readers feel better about themselves white readers or white guilt seminar attendees will know they've done something meaningful by examining how much of a as white people suck and then decide they don't need to do anything really tangible to help anyone volunteer as raises the profit of white guilt d'angelo says in her book wanting to jump over the hard personal work and get a solution is a foundation of white fragility solutions are racist and action is racist how convenient for corporate america and companies like amazon that they don't need to think about discriminatory hiring practices or a living wage for black employees racism can be solved in getting all the white people in the room and having them sell flagellate so much that they like it the anti-racism consulting industry also serves a more sinister role in keeping real corporate civil rights violations hidden holding an anti-racism training however ineffective can be illegal shield against the civil rights lawsuit and you have to mire mckinsey d'angelo and all the other grifters tak
about how to make certain educated white readers feel better about themselves white readers or white guilt seminar attendees will know they've done something meaningful by examining how much of a as white people suck and then decide they don't need to do anything really tangible to help anyone volunteer as raises the profit of white guilt d'angelo says in her book wanting to jump over the hard personal work and get a solution is a foundation of white fragility solutions are racist and action is...
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Jul 13, 2020
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obama met with students at the white house to talk about it. >> having the platform of the white housereally helpful in getting attention to stuff. a lot of times when i do something, a lot of cameras show up and people tend to watch and write about it. sometimes they write about more than what i'm wearing. so i think it's my job to help shine the light on things that are already working. so that's one of the reasons why i chose this as my initiative. i also think that one of the reasons -- the ways that i think we can move this effort, one of the reasons why i think that we can be successful is that it doesn't require, i don't believe, and others may have struggled a bit more, it doesn't require whole scale changes in your life. the beauty about kids, you guys, is that you're young, your metabolisms are really healthy, which essentially means once you start moving and eating right, you're going to, you know, you guys change really quickly. you're growing and everything is working right. so if we make some little changes, get you guys moving more, a little more movement, a little less
obama met with students at the white house to talk about it. >> having the platform of the white housereally helpful in getting attention to stuff. a lot of times when i do something, a lot of cameras show up and people tend to watch and write about it. sometimes they write about more than what i'm wearing. so i think it's my job to help shine the light on things that are already working. so that's one of the reasons why i chose this as my initiative. i also think that one of the reasons...
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Jul 6, 2020
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room at the top of the white house.y hired teachers and had other kids around the same age who were mostly the children of other members of the administration. and that school went through the length of the kennedy presidency. and at the time of the assassinati assassination, november of 1963, one of the things that lbj did do which was gracious which was to say the school can go on at least until the end of the semester. >> there was a controversy because all the children were white. >> there was. although there is a photograph of them, in fact n michael's ho oral history of mrs. kennedy shows the class portrait of caroline and her schoolmates and there's one african-american boy, son of andrew hatcher, assistant press secretary. they were receiving. >> he said to his father, the president addressed me by name. how do you think he knew it was you, he must have been told i was the one with the blue pants. >> as opposed to the african-american child. >> this is at the height of concern over integration and people were wr
room at the top of the white house.y hired teachers and had other kids around the same age who were mostly the children of other members of the administration. and that school went through the length of the kennedy presidency. and at the time of the assassinati assassination, november of 1963, one of the things that lbj did do which was gracious which was to say the school can go on at least until the end of the semester. >> there was a controversy because all the children were white....
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Jul 27, 2020
07/20
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a white honky who slides down a black chimney and comes out white. [applause] brian: i have to say that last remark was interesting. white honky who slides down a black chimney, comes out white. rep. lewis: there's a lot of rhetoric and there's a lot of playing on words and very emotional. brian: did it work? rep. lewis: and that was not -- that was not part of the sncc that i knew. brian: what happened? rep. lewis: something went wrong. sncc came to that point where, in my estimation, it was forced to die a natural death. we were conceived in this whole idea of the building of a truly interracial democracy. there were black students and white students, working together, building together, suffering together. you cannot forget that in 1964, one year after i became chair, during the mississippi summer project, that we recruited all these young people, blacks and whites, primarily students, but lawyers and doctors and priests and nuns came to work in mississippi during the voter registration drive. that state had a black vote in each population of more
a white honky who slides down a black chimney and comes out white. [applause] brian: i have to say that last remark was interesting. white honky who slides down a black chimney, comes out white. rep. lewis: there's a lot of rhetoric and there's a lot of playing on words and very emotional. brian: did it work? rep. lewis: and that was not -- that was not part of the sncc that i knew. brian: what happened? rep. lewis: something went wrong. sncc came to that point where, in my estimation, it was...
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Jul 15, 2020
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so are white people. more white people, by the way. more white people. >> reporter: okay, so that's misleading. it is true that more white people than black people are killed by police, but it's the frequency that's the issue when you account for population. 2.5% of blacks are killed more often than whites in the united states. this is all rhetoric the president has used before, quite frankly. and it goes all the way back to the 2016 election. the kind of language that the president thinks appeals to his base. alisyn, back to you. >> joe johns, thank you very much. >>> well, the white house war of words against dr. fauci is apparently back on. that's next. introducing new voltaren arthritis pain gel, the first and only full prescription strength non-steroidal anti-inflammatory gel available over-the-counter. new voltaren is powerful arthritis pain relief in a gel. voltaren. the joy of movement. did you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance new voltata-da! powerful arthritis pain relief in a gel. so you only pay for what you
so are white people. more white people, by the way. more white people. >> reporter: okay, so that's misleading. it is true that more white people than black people are killed by police, but it's the frequency that's the issue when you account for population. 2.5% of blacks are killed more often than whites in the united states. this is all rhetoric the president has used before, quite frankly. and it goes all the way back to the 2016 election. the kind of language that the president...
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Jul 21, 2020
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white house press association, i have often advocated regular briefings by the white house press secretary, which lapsed in 2016. canmerits of the briefings be debated, but i think the white house has obligation to answer pronouncements of the executive branch. the white house press secretary's job differs fundamentally from those of a spokesperson, a candidate, or a political party, and the white house press secretary serves as the president of the -- pleasure of the president, but their salary is paid by the taxpayers." from your standpoint, we are not getting that from the administration, correct? guest: no. i am glad to see that briefings are taking place, but if you look at the briefings, they are very short events. they are almost always less than half an hour. sometimes no more than 15 minutes, and they have fallen into a pattern where there is kind of an opening monologue that is meant to, you know, either attack the people in that room, the reporters in that room and the news organizations, or to promote some political issue that the president is harping on. and then they closed i
white house press association, i have often advocated regular briefings by the white house press secretary, which lapsed in 2016. canmerits of the briefings be debated, but i think the white house has obligation to answer pronouncements of the executive branch. the white house press secretary's job differs fundamentally from those of a spokesperson, a candidate, or a political party, and the white house press secretary serves as the president of the -- pleasure of the president, but their...
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Jul 13, 2020
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let's make america white again? >> yeah, great to them is white.u see, it didn't include mexicans or spanish-americans. and so, when you say make america great again, from my perspective, when has america been great? america's always been white. america's always been us against them. >> in the wake of el paso, the department of homeland security, for the first time since it was created after 9/11, added white supremacist violence to its list of priority threats. at the prince of peace church, pastor grady held a special sunday service. he organized a fundraiser to help his daughter on her long road to recovery. then, the guest of honor, with a surprise appearance. it was the first time michelle had left the hospital. >> having this community, has seen me through countless bad days since this has happened. the support of my fellow church members has been profound. they're praying for me. it's helped me a lot to know that i have support. i felt like it was important to show that, you know, i'm still here. and not only am i still here, i'm getting bet
let's make america white again? >> yeah, great to them is white.u see, it didn't include mexicans or spanish-americans. and so, when you say make america great again, from my perspective, when has america been great? america's always been white. america's always been us against them. >> in the wake of el paso, the department of homeland security, for the first time since it was created after 9/11, added white supremacist violence to its list of priority threats. at the prince of...
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it is not really poor white americans. it is white americans without a bachelors degree.degree. so we were immediately in this thing where the economy is just not treating these people who have not got a four—year college degree very well. not only that, but it has unleashed these pharmaceutical companies on them to make a huge amount of money and to propagate an enormous amount of misery and destruction amongst these people. what kind of scale of extra death, if i can put it that way, are you ascribing to this phenomena? the last years in which we have data are 2017 and 2018. and there were 158,000 deaths on despair in each of those two years for which we have data. that is more people than have died of covid—19 in the us so far. covid—19 may well exceed that. these are very large numbers. they are not all excess, because after all, there is always some suicide, people will die from alcohol poisoning, and so on. and we reckon that normally runs at about 60,000 a year. so it is killing about 100,000 people a year. so one of the analogies we use is if you take a boeing 737
it is not really poor white americans. it is white americans without a bachelors degree.degree. so we were immediately in this thing where the economy is just not treating these people who have not got a four—year college degree very well. not only that, but it has unleashed these pharmaceutical companies on them to make a huge amount of money and to propagate an enormous amount of misery and destruction amongst these people. what kind of scale of extra death, if i can put it that way, are...