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Mar 1, 2024
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so welcome, folks, from north carolina. we appreciate you being here. and seated next to him is jon sensbach. he teaches early american history at the university of florida and drove up here from gainesville to join us. so we're very grateful to you, john, for being here tonight. okay. and lastly, on the end we have scott nelson, who is georgia athletic association professor of at the university of georgia drove over from athens today. thank you for being here with us today. scott thanks so much for having me, claire. so like i said, this book covers a lot of ground. it goes back several thousand, actually, and takes us up pretty close to the present. so it truly is a comprehensive history of the south. but with so many contributor, with so much ground to cover, i thought we would start with just the basic question to the editor, and that is how did this project initially come about? well, it came when an editor from the university of north carolina press came to me two decades ago. and suggested that it was time to have an interpretive history of the a
so welcome, folks, from north carolina. we appreciate you being here. and seated next to him is jon sensbach. he teaches early american history at the university of florida and drove up here from gainesville to join us. so we're very grateful to you, john, for being here tonight. okay. and lastly, on the end we have scott nelson, who is georgia athletic association professor of at the university of georgia drove over from athens today. thank you for being here with us today. scott thanks so...
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Mar 3, 2024
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north carolina now. and in 1874, he gets elected to the state legislature as a probe, black civil rights, anti klan politician. and i don't know how to explain. and you look at this picture, do i have a pointer? here he is. i think that's him right there. and he's standing elbow to elbow with a black legislator. he in this in this biracial full legislature fighting for black political civil rights. it's an incredible thing. and later in the decade, he travels to new york and he shares a stage at the cooper union with henry highland garnet, one of the great black preachers of the 19th century and fight for the abolition of slavery, the world. this is just a taste of the extraordinary story of appleton oak smith. and i hope that it gives a new window on how thoroughly lincoln administration was dedicated to destroying the slave trade during the civil war. thank you so much. we we've we've got about 10 minutes for questions. and so just please come to the microphones as that the audience and c-span can hear
north carolina now. and in 1874, he gets elected to the state legislature as a probe, black civil rights, anti klan politician. and i don't know how to explain. and you look at this picture, do i have a pointer? here he is. i think that's him right there. and he's standing elbow to elbow with a black legislator. he in this in this biracial full legislature fighting for black political civil rights. it's an incredible thing. and later in the decade, he travels to new york and he shares a stage...
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Mar 25, 2024
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north carolina, but was also very active in tennessee and kentucky. and in kentucky, it was called the bluegrass klan. so mark one takes on this job. and the first thing he does is he hires this man, william gibson, who is a free black man from baltimore. when he was 18, he was he was very wel ecated, played the violin. he wanted to be a minister. but when he was 18, hwent to louisville, kentucky, and up a school for black and he was very success for that. and he became quite well known. and when marcon was looking for somebody to help out grant's efforts at, increasing civil rights and integrating the postal service, he was the first man he chose, and he gave him a. he gave him the most important mail route in the state of kentucky between louisville and lexington. in the middle is frankfort, which is theapal of kentky on the first day out for gibso everywhere he went. and he wrote about this later beushe did write his memoirs. he wrote about this later. he said, everybody just looked at him like they were seeing a ghost or something wrong. the secon
north carolina, but was also very active in tennessee and kentucky. and in kentucky, it was called the bluegrass klan. so mark one takes on this job. and the first thing he does is he hires this man, william gibson, who is a free black man from baltimore. when he was 18, he was he was very wel ecated, played the violin. he wanted to be a minister. but when he was 18, hwent to louisville, kentucky, and up a school for black and he was very success for that. and he became quite well known. and...
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Mar 30, 2024
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very you know, he's head of the north carolina medical association. so he said, well, we should be we don't actually speak our minds because you wouldn't want to say something that might used against, you know. you're taking care of children. you so so you have this kind of defensiveness that this would leak in society and. i think it makes everybody. people when people are not the truth people when they're choosing their words. so neuroni writes about this and. it's say you can't have actually an organization that's trustworthy if people are scared to be themselves and if they make a mistake to apologize. so when you talk about so much of what you say rings true, but it also intersects with other really trends that are troubling in american society, i and i can't really fit them together. so, you know, trust depends on facts and an of what's true. so does what you're describing fit in with some of the broader issues that we have around just absolutely divergent narratives within a given institution right there was a really good column the other day j
very you know, he's head of the north carolina medical association. so he said, well, we should be we don't actually speak our minds because you wouldn't want to say something that might used against, you know. you're taking care of children. you so so you have this kind of defensiveness that this would leak in society and. i think it makes everybody. people when people are not the truth people when they're choosing their words. so neuroni writes about this and. it's say you can't have actually...
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Mar 19, 2024
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davis. >> thank you for walk in north carolina, mr. chair. to the ranking member and to all of the guests, witnesses are here today, thank you so much for taking the time to join us and to provide us these important updates as it pertains to the state of our escalation infrastructure. want to travel back to north carolina some day to see -- seymour johnson air force base. as they are often challenges that outpost on a basis in terms of health risks. one of the things that stood out to me when i visited seymour johnson air force base was the deteriorating and particularly fiscal fitness center, fitness center. and as we talk about recruitment, retention, readiness, for fitness center itself to pose a risk, potentially to members, what steps are we fighting that the department is taking to try to address and particularly aging physical fitness and equipment infrastructure that puts military personnel and their families at risk? >> representative davis understand that's a question for me pgh yes. yes, i'm sorry, mr. johnson. >> first and foremos
davis. >> thank you for walk in north carolina, mr. chair. to the ranking member and to all of the guests, witnesses are here today, thank you so much for taking the time to join us and to provide us these important updates as it pertains to the state of our escalation infrastructure. want to travel back to north carolina some day to see -- seymour johnson air force base. as they are often challenges that outpost on a basis in terms of health risks. one of the things that stood out to me...
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Mar 20, 2024
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i think the gentleman from north carolina and ohio. the lady from vermont is now recognized. >> thank you, mr. chair, assistant attorney general clark. thanks so much for being here. and i wanted to start by just personally thanking the justice department for its work regarding the massacre at the tree of life synagogue in pittsburgh on october 27th, 2018. as you know, this heinous act of anti-semitism took the lives of 11 jewish americans. and i just want to thank the doj for all the work there. and it's clear that anti semitism and islamophobia is um tragically on the rise both around the globe and here in our own country. and my home state of vermont is not immune. in burlington over thanksgiving , three young palestinian americans were shot as they simply walked on the street. hashem, kenan, and tassin spoke a mix of arabic and english and two wore traditional kafi. and although the investigation will determine whether this horrible crime will meet the legal definition of a hate crime, we know and i say we all vermonters know that
i think the gentleman from north carolina and ohio. the lady from vermont is now recognized. >> thank you, mr. chair, assistant attorney general clark. thanks so much for being here. and i wanted to start by just personally thanking the justice department for its work regarding the massacre at the tree of life synagogue in pittsburgh on october 27th, 2018. as you know, this heinous act of anti-semitism took the lives of 11 jewish americans. and i just want to thank the doj for all the...
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Mar 4, 2024
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so you have lincoln is receiving petitions from men in north carolina and from men in tennessee. and they're talking about having voting rights until 1835. and then at the height of this new democracy that's brought on by jacksonian ism black men are cut out of that political process. and so, john, if you would like to, take over and introduce this letter as reconstruction was taking place, louisiana, a large of creoles, got together to fight for the right vote. and creoles were people of african, spanish, french, native american descent. and they write very long petition that they address to both lincoln and to congress for the right to vote. and from their perspective, they are light skinned, free born, elite, wealthy, taxpaying citizens, louisiana. and they make the case that because their status in society, they should have the right to vote and. they put this on a long petition and it signed by two men who will then bring it to washington, d.c. and give it to lincoln. the next 28 signatures are elderly men of color who had served with andrew jackson during the war of 1812 an
so you have lincoln is receiving petitions from men in north carolina and from men in tennessee. and they're talking about having voting rights until 1835. and then at the height of this new democracy that's brought on by jacksonian ism black men are cut out of that political process. and so, john, if you would like to, take over and introduce this letter as reconstruction was taking place, louisiana, a large of creoles, got together to fight for the right vote. and creoles were people of...
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Mar 9, 2024
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so i advised my client from north carolina, invest in that tennessee company if you love their management, their trade secrets, but don't invest on the basis of their patent eligibility. >> i want to stay with that on software because this affects a lot of the health-care industry. one thing we've also found out is it has an impact on quantum. in august, i did a quantum roundtable with some of our innovators. and this situation came up, because there seems to be an ambiguity around that. so when we talk about this bill and the impact that could have, and really leading to some specificity, give me just a couple of seconds on that. >> quantum computing is obviously a transformational technology. it's all about taking an entirely new way of computing and applying them to the most abstract and difficult of problems, like artificial intelligence, etc. that's exactly the kind of innovation that paradoxically and so unfortunately gets found ineligible under current law, because it is deemed to be too abstract. but under pera, quantum computing will all be entirely eligible. >> thank you, mr. ch
so i advised my client from north carolina, invest in that tennessee company if you love their management, their trade secrets, but don't invest on the basis of their patent eligibility. >> i want to stay with that on software because this affects a lot of the health-care industry. one thing we've also found out is it has an impact on quantum. in august, i did a quantum roundtable with some of our innovators. and this situation came up, because there seems to be an ambiguity around that....
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Mar 8, 2024
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carolina. ranking member tillis: thank you, mr. chairman, and thanks everyone for being here. these are two of the most significant issues we must address within the patent community. today we focus on patent eligibility reform. while i do believe -- i don't always believe the best fix is allegedly to fix, but i think we reached a point where legislation is needed. as a result of a series of u.s. supreme court decisions which created categories of judicial exceptions, patent eligibility law has become confused, constricted, unclear, and unclear over the years. inconsistent case decisions, and certainty innovation, and investment communities, at unpredictable business outcomes. this lack of clarity threatens to hinder innovation and to unseat the united states as the world innovation leader especially in medicine, artificial intelligence, computing, and 5g wireless and beyond. this impacts individual inventors and businesses both large and small. furthermore, this lack of clarity has the potenti
carolina. ranking member tillis: thank you, mr. chairman, and thanks everyone for being here. these are two of the most significant issues we must address within the patent community. today we focus on patent eligibility reform. while i do believe -- i don't always believe the best fix is allegedly to fix, but i think we reached a point where legislation is needed. as a result of a series of u.s. supreme court decisions which created categories of judicial exceptions, patent eligibility law has...
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Mar 9, 2024
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carolina, good luck, because i don't think is i think people are much hardened than you all might want to accept. i think that there are most people don't care about any of these issues. i think you want them to i think you wish they would not. but this is not the i'm going to let this go this is not the 1990s electorate. this is 2024 where division is profit and unity, a loser where if you're dividing and you're and your gossip thing and you're ripping people apart, you can make a lot of this is the reality that we live in people on one side believe nothing of the person on the other side, they go online and they read. they scroll through their phones and everything they believe is getting. 50 times a day. if you have you know what i mean? you're telling me thinking maybe i'm nagging my kid too much. but, you know, if every one time you're nagging your kid, they're seeing 50 things that are selling them the opposite. by the time you come back to them between the media between social media, between our politics, i know you want to believe that all of this matters more than i believe th
carolina, good luck, because i don't think is i think people are much hardened than you all might want to accept. i think that there are most people don't care about any of these issues. i think you want them to i think you wish they would not. but this is not the i'm going to let this go this is not the 1990s electorate. this is 2024 where division is profit and unity, a loser where if you're dividing and you're and your gossip thing and you're ripping people apart, you can make a lot of this...
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Mar 9, 2024
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and from then, from there i was i was starting to go home to north carolina. i thought that's where i'd wind up. and when i got a call again from my old roommate saying, there's a position open under the west wing of white house and to help run the speechwriting, speechwriting and so forth. and then i said, why don't you why don't you present yourself so i did. i did. and i said, this is a lark. i wrote it for you were however and i i didn't know you were a diversity hire. i was a diversity. i was a d, i was a d i without knowing it. one of the first. but i came in then with, with and started working for nixon and one of the interesting conversations i had was before i came, they they weren't quite sure if all of them were a price running, a speechwriting operation. harold tripp guy, harold tripp guy who wrote the big on goldwater way back when. in any event, i'd gone to yale. he'd gone to yale, and we had it all. and we both okay, i didn't vote for the i'll give him one year before the election start and that's what i said. well, take one year to write. tell
and from then, from there i was i was starting to go home to north carolina. i thought that's where i'd wind up. and when i got a call again from my old roommate saying, there's a position open under the west wing of white house and to help run the speechwriting, speechwriting and so forth. and then i said, why don't you why don't you present yourself so i did. i did. and i said, this is a lark. i wrote it for you were however and i i didn't know you were a diversity hire. i was a diversity. i...
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Mar 27, 2024
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and he also designed the biltmore estate in asheville, north carolina, for george washington. vanderbilt, the second and in new york city, only three of his buildings remain. they used to line the streets of new york and the only three, but still remain the pedestal to the statue of liberty. the vanderbilt family mausoleum, which is on staten island. and then the entrance to the metropolitan museum, which i called wing d. and i say wing davis was completed in 1902 and obviously faces onto fifth avenue. but i say winged because most buildings in the gilded age, when they got too small, they just knocked them down. they built something bigger, they knocked it down. they built something even bigger. they didn't do that at the met, at the met, they kept on adding wings. and so it really kind of becomes this living, breathing, kind of architectural history of america over the last hundred and 50 years. and anybody who's been to the met, don't ask me how we took this photograph because 24 hour a day was a hot dog stand right at the bottom of the steps. i wish you managed to somehow
and he also designed the biltmore estate in asheville, north carolina, for george washington. vanderbilt, the second and in new york city, only three of his buildings remain. they used to line the streets of new york and the only three, but still remain the pedestal to the statue of liberty. the vanderbilt family mausoleum, which is on staten island. and then the entrance to the metropolitan museum, which i called wing d. and i say wing davis was completed in 1902 and obviously faces onto fifth...
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Mar 9, 2024
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carolina at a major rally and you spot a little girl being held up by her father and trying to get mark's attention because mark is one of the celebrities at these trump rallies. and mark is just not seeing her. and the girl starts to cry. so what happened is we're in his home state and i grabbed mark and i pointed at the little girl and i told that he needed to go over and he was was going to ruin her day or her life. he didn't go over the they after her. so he sent me back to the stockton to get a bunch of little gifts, including an american pin. and by the time i had returned got to have goose bumps right now by the time i had returned were in the overflow section of the rally crowd. so they were only at the rally on jumbotrons. mark had pulled the little girl over security fencing and was crouching talking to her. so i slipped him all the gifts and she was so happy and i was talking to her father and he was telling me that he had worked night shift and his daughter to go to this rally. so about and this was a rally that we had rescheduled due to inclement weather and he had you know,
carolina at a major rally and you spot a little girl being held up by her father and trying to get mark's attention because mark is one of the celebrities at these trump rallies. and mark is just not seeing her. and the girl starts to cry. so what happened is we're in his home state and i grabbed mark and i pointed at the little girl and i told that he needed to go over and he was was going to ruin her day or her life. he didn't go over the they after her. so he sent me back to the stockton to...
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Mar 21, 2024
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carolina. but if we only come here and make a point today and don't start focusing on making a difference which requires people to stop shouting and start listening and start passing language here, the bad actors are just going to be off our shores. i have another question for you all. how many question people roughly -- if you don't know the exact number, it's okay. how many people roughly do you have looking 24 hours a day at these horrible image, and just go real quick with an answer down the line and filtering it out? >> it's most of the 40,000 of our people who work on -- >> and, again? >> we have 2,300 all over the world. >> we have 40,000 trust and safety professionals around the world. >> we have approximately 2,000 people dedicated to trust and safety and content moderation. >> our platform is much smaller than these folks. it's hundreds of people, and it's looking at content 80% of our work -- >> as i mentioned, these people have a horrible job. many of them experience -- they have to
carolina. but if we only come here and make a point today and don't start focusing on making a difference which requires people to stop shouting and start listening and start passing language here, the bad actors are just going to be off our shores. i have another question for you all. how many question people roughly -- if you don't know the exact number, it's okay. how many people roughly do you have looking 24 hours a day at these horrible image, and just go real quick with an answer down...
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Mar 22, 2024
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i'm majoring in international politics, i'm a junior, not quite from georgia but from north carolina, just down the road. my question is, in rep praition -- in preparation for this talk i went back and listened to the very famous perfect phone call if you will. i know. and obviously there's a lot of things that were shocking about that interaction. i was wondering if you could tell us more about the lead up to that interaction and the lead up to that, you know, fateful day in january, or late december, whenever exactly it was. what the buildup was like. how he reached out. what the communication was like prior. everything that led up to that moment. brad: i know they wanted to talk to us for a little bit. someone sent me a text. they said, it came from the mail, nccongressman@gmail.com, but texted it to me. it said hey, i'm mark meadows, your voice mail is full. give me a call. didn't give me a phone number so i didn't call him. i didn't primarily because we were running elections. and when i was on city council, what we were -- what was beaten into our heads, whenever you're doing th
i'm majoring in international politics, i'm a junior, not quite from georgia but from north carolina, just down the road. my question is, in rep praition -- in preparation for this talk i went back and listened to the very famous perfect phone call if you will. i know. and obviously there's a lot of things that were shocking about that interaction. i was wondering if you could tell us more about the lead up to that interaction and the lead up to that, you know, fateful day in january, or late...
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Mar 1, 2024
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carolina they don't manufacture here in sumter anymore and look at what they're telling you about the furniture industry. it's a resource. they plant a tree, every tree they cut to use in their furniture. it's a stable workforce source that pays good wages and is diverse and that people for them for a long time they met it's american made solid wood furniture will last you know several lifetimes. so it's kind of like, you know, we've talked about company that you know, starts in the twenties and sells i think. 1967 but we recycle you had mentioned it's this cyclical thing in terms where going to selling american by america and stable workforce you know where we're we are carbon neutral all the way all the ways in which today is influencing very old and traditional way so we'll all look forward to the next next few sessions where we start putting together actually what this exhibition that we're going to do looks like and so thank youi happy that you all here are here to join in this discussion. the examination
carolina they don't manufacture here in sumter anymore and look at what they're telling you about the furniture industry. it's a resource. they plant a tree, every tree they cut to use in their furniture. it's a stable workforce source that pays good wages and is diverse and that people for them for a long time they met it's american made solid wood furniture will last you know several lifetimes. so it's kind of like, you know, we've talked about company that you know, starts in the twenties...
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Mar 28, 2024
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north carolina, i had just a couple of hundred mississippi at one point had fewer than 200 for the entire state. this doesn't constitute military occupation. nearly all these were infantry. it's rather hard, if you think about it, for an infantryman to capture a klansman on horseback. so the klan carried out its terrorism virtually with impunity for years. the andrew johnson administration was not very interested in prosecuting the klan. in addition klansmen, the klan intimidated or co-opted law enforcement judges, juries and so on. so there very, very little prosecute people who testified in clan were often murdered. that was part of the terrorist goal of the klan. so how did how does government deal with. finally, i crucial is the passage of the 14th amendment which extends civil rights or citizenship rights let's say citizenship rights to free people across the south and. seems to provide a guarantee that those rights will be protected. there is a great debate that's taking in congress that's taking place across the country about who what entity can enforce civil rights. traditionally,
north carolina, i had just a couple of hundred mississippi at one point had fewer than 200 for the entire state. this doesn't constitute military occupation. nearly all these were infantry. it's rather hard, if you think about it, for an infantryman to capture a klansman on horseback. so the klan carried out its terrorism virtually with impunity for years. the andrew johnson administration was not very interested in prosecuting the klan. in addition klansmen, the klan intimidated or co-opted...
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Mar 8, 2024
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that's right film in the seventies and high point, north carolina. so anyway, ladies and gentlemen, john butler. oh, thank you. this is this got a little bit tougher. i just found out my daughter's watching online. i'd like to thank the rtc for choosing me to be the honored as the 11th recipient of the jerry thompson award. this to me, is like winning a third super bowl trophy. i was part of the emmy and murrow award winning team at nbc for january six, and now i'm receiving the thompson award for surviving the insanity of covering news inside these buildings. i met jerry in the mid eighties as he moved from local news and freelancing to cnn. jerry, with his soft spoken demeanor, exuded a quiet confidence doing his job. he wanted to help everyone understand what goes on out here in the field. he believed in sharing this knowledge, and i believe in it. to having interns and desk assistants join us in the field, helps them understand what goes on out and out here. it's knowing that russell rotunda, will rogers and cannon rotunda are not all in the same
that's right film in the seventies and high point, north carolina. so anyway, ladies and gentlemen, john butler. oh, thank you. this is this got a little bit tougher. i just found out my daughter's watching online. i'd like to thank the rtc for choosing me to be the honored as the 11th recipient of the jerry thompson award. this to me, is like winning a third super bowl trophy. i was part of the emmy and murrow award winning team at nbc for january six, and now i'm receiving the thompson award...
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Mar 2, 2024
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carolina, in south carolina, in georgia. that's true it's true that he was an ordained elder in the big mainline presbyterian church. that's all true. we have to go a step further. he was part the very liberal sort of the victorians sentimental liberal theology of the day. and in our next class. we will we will look at the contrast with a much more orthodox presbyterian whom he knew. this is what wilson said may of 1911. the occasion was the 400th anniversary sorry, the throne, the anniversary of, the publication of the king james version of the bible, the 16th, 11, so-called authorized version. he was asked to speak at a commemorations like this. all over the country. and he was asked speak i believe it was in denver colorado. these are selective quotations. i am at risk of being guilty of doing what i've complained about other people doing picking the quotable, most quotable the quotations and piling them up. but they do tell us something true. an important about wilson's theology. quote, no man can down and withhold his h
carolina, in south carolina, in georgia. that's true it's true that he was an ordained elder in the big mainline presbyterian church. that's all true. we have to go a step further. he was part the very liberal sort of the victorians sentimental liberal theology of the day. and in our next class. we will we will look at the contrast with a much more orthodox presbyterian whom he knew. this is what wilson said may of 1911. the occasion was the 400th anniversary sorry, the throne, the anniversary...
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Mar 25, 2024
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joe johnston still had his army north carolina. kirby smith had his army in texas. so the war was by no means over or one. and then stanton had to organize the wonderful and majestic funeral procession for abraham lincoln that, took him through all the major cities of the north and the journey back to springfield. so stanton had to hunt the lincoln assassins, get john wilkes booth, find the conspirators, fight and win the civil war, and organize the national tribute to abraham lincoln. so stanton is a great american hero, so overlooked. one of the best things about the show is stan is finally given his due in american history. it's emmy award winning actor tobias menzies, as you said, who portrays edwin stanton. yeah. here's a little bit of how he portrays stanton, but if you're a war secretary, how come you don't assign a task like this to a clerk? you've got a little brother and we let him solve your problems. my lady says i never met a challenge. i could delegate. why was it up to edwin stanton? do all these things? lead the search as he's trying to win the war a
joe johnston still had his army north carolina. kirby smith had his army in texas. so the war was by no means over or one. and then stanton had to organize the wonderful and majestic funeral procession for abraham lincoln that, took him through all the major cities of the north and the journey back to springfield. so stanton had to hunt the lincoln assassins, get john wilkes booth, find the conspirators, fight and win the civil war, and organize the national tribute to abraham lincoln. so...