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May 29, 2023
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and that relates to henry brown. would you please telling his story? yeah. henry brown is is i mean, he is a man who is enslaved in richmond, virginia. so he works in a tobacco factory, which is kind of typical of urban slavery in this period. he's also a married married for one who's enslaved to another man. this is also typical of slavery in this period. and as a result, when that other man decides to sell her and their children, henry brown is left without his family. is torn apart from his family. he tells this horrifying story of coming home and seeing his wife and children dragged through the streets of richmond in chains. and it's at this moment that henry brown decides to run away for many enslaved people. family was the single thing holding them, preventing them from taking this great risk to run away. now that he had been forcibly separated from his family, he figured he had nothing to lose but it's still not an easy thing to run away. he lives in richmond. it's not the easiest thing to travel. all that distance. but he concocts a kind of brilliant
and that relates to henry brown. would you please telling his story? yeah. henry brown is is i mean, he is a man who is enslaved in richmond, virginia. so he works in a tobacco factory, which is kind of typical of urban slavery in this period. he's also a married married for one who's enslaved to another man. this is also typical of slavery in this period. and as a result, when that other man decides to sell her and their children, henry brown is left without his family. is torn apart from his...
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May 2, 2023
05/23
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this is john brown the opposite, slave trade around cofounder of brown university. in the back of his magisterial home is a little annex where there is what is known as john brown's chariot and it is to our modern i tiny. i compare the forward facing seats to the backseat of the the w bug, a tiny little thing and according to family tradition when the newly inaugurated president, george washington, was visiting providence, john brown gave washington a ride in that cherry it down to the shipyard where he was building a ship named for the new president. that got me to wondering. in the book i was writing, washington visited providence several times but i had no idea he had come to providence once he was president. why? why was he there? that led me to realize he went on a series of presidential trips in an attempt to create a sense of nationhood among 13 former colonies. finishing up this book of straight history, close to a dozen books i had written in the last 25 years. i live on nantucket island, 14 miles long, i grew up in pittsburgh, a sailor in the maritime capi
this is john brown the opposite, slave trade around cofounder of brown university. in the back of his magisterial home is a little annex where there is what is known as john brown's chariot and it is to our modern i tiny. i compare the forward facing seats to the backseat of the the w bug, a tiny little thing and according to family tradition when the newly inaugurated president, george washington, was visiting providence, john brown gave washington a ride in that cherry it down to the shipyard...
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May 1, 2023
05/23
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in 1967, i moved to new york, and walking down 7th avenue, who did i see but wrap -- brad brown. i'm wondering if you did any resource or found any information on him in the book he did. >> i did. i talk about him in the epilogue come at the very end of the book -- epilogue, at the very end of the book, when he took over sncc in 1967, when you saw from stokely carmichael that he moved. he stood for a lot of the same things that stokely stood for but did not have -- although he became increasingly militant, he was also very charming and charismatic. rap brown was very provocative, but without a lot of the light touch and the charm in dealing with the press and the white power structure, but the other thing rap brown had to confront is that it was really -- so the fbi had a surveillance program directed at dr. king and at malcolm x going back to the early 1960's, but in 1967, it was stepped up dramatically, and there was really -- it was called the cointel program directed specifically at these more militant black groups, at sncc, now run by h. rap brown at the panthers, and they w
in 1967, i moved to new york, and walking down 7th avenue, who did i see but wrap -- brad brown. i'm wondering if you did any resource or found any information on him in the book he did. >> i did. i talk about him in the epilogue come at the very end of the book -- epilogue, at the very end of the book, when he took over sncc in 1967, when you saw from stokely carmichael that he moved. he stood for a lot of the same things that stokely stood for but did not have -- although he became...
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May 20, 2023
05/23
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brown then today or whatever. but ruth simmons, it was is a master class how to manage you know, she managed the trustee board, managed the administration and she managed the students, you know, and brown students don't like anybody but they liked ruth simmons. she's someone i admire. so, you know, there have been other women who've come into my life and i didn't mention my mother. i always admired my mother. she was so talented and so and she never finished college either. but she would read all the time. she crossword puzzles. she wrote a letter to the president about the donut hole in medicare. one time and she was just smart as. a whip. what's her name? delma de. so you can remember her? yeah. and she? a world class. she worked at children's hospital here. okay, we're down. we're down to last couple of minutes. i want to ask this one more. one last question and then i'm going to ask you to give us some closing thoughts and you've done a lot of people think, look, just helping betty to become what it is like a
brown then today or whatever. but ruth simmons, it was is a master class how to manage you know, she managed the trustee board, managed the administration and she managed the students, you know, and brown students don't like anybody but they liked ruth simmons. she's someone i admire. so, you know, there have been other women who've come into my life and i didn't mention my mother. i always admired my mother. she was so talented and so and she never finished college either. but she would read...
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May 1, 2023
05/23
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and because of that, native americans, black votes, brown folks etc.. we keep baking entry into a place as if it does not already belong to us. it is already mine. i don't have to ask you for anything, it already belongs to me. as long as we conceptualize it in that way we are always politically undermined, and we are always politically challenged. i think that people who really truly love freedom which includes people of every race, really should understand that the freest thing i think on the planet right now potentially is for people who really truly love freedom to put everything else down and put on our armor and understand we have to fight this together. what we are looking at right now in america is so dangerous. what is potentially on the horizon, everybody here knows what i'm talking about, if that comes again shame on us. shame on us. but what i am also saying is if we are not careful some of the reason we allow it is because we want parts of the spoils of it. and so it's like patriarchy, you can't have a little bit of it. if you invited it's
and because of that, native americans, black votes, brown folks etc.. we keep baking entry into a place as if it does not already belong to us. it is already mine. i don't have to ask you for anything, it already belongs to me. as long as we conceptualize it in that way we are always politically undermined, and we are always politically challenged. i think that people who really truly love freedom which includes people of every race, really should understand that the freest thing i think on the...
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May 22, 2023
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reddish brown hair? you know, i would probably to somebody like mary thompson who really knows these things, you know, the now just retired historian from mount vernon, my my sense of it, i've never actually it's a good question i've never worked out the chronology seems to me that he that he kept his natural color. it's hard for me now because he powdered it all the time. you know, pretty early in his life. and it ends up that way in most paintings. but my sense of like people who saw without the powder is that he kept it a long time, but he didn't didn't very aggressively. but i couldn't give you a year or anything like that. yeah, i think i started growing earlier in life. he did. we have one question from the folks online by what process is the hair authenticated? do. sure. so again, the dna hasn't so far been used with much success, although we'll probably get there very soon if people are willing, you might have to destroy some to get there, which is one of the complications. but generally, it's th
reddish brown hair? you know, i would probably to somebody like mary thompson who really knows these things, you know, the now just retired historian from mount vernon, my my sense of it, i've never actually it's a good question i've never worked out the chronology seems to me that he that he kept his natural color. it's hard for me now because he powdered it all the time. you know, pretty early in his life. and it ends up that way in most paintings. but my sense of like people who saw without...
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May 1, 2023
05/23
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be skeptical about what you hear about black and brown kids to be that support. [applause] >> i am sorry to cut you two off. we are at time. the authors will be signing books and i am sure they have lots of thoughts on additional topics for you all. i encourage you to come say hello. thank you for attending the panel. have fun attending the rest of the festival.
be skeptical about what you hear about black and brown kids to be that support. [applause] >> i am sorry to cut you two off. we are at time. the authors will be signing books and i am sure they have lots of thoughts on additional topics for you all. i encourage you to come say hello. thank you for attending the panel. have fun attending the rest of the festival.
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May 31, 2023
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i wish you'd all go back and look at jerry brown's. so can you speak hey you so the principle we all agree with the pragmatist is the question liz truss is an example tell us what happened with liz truss and what lesson what pragmatic pragmatic lessons can we learn from what z truss di wrong despite the fact that we know she has the principles? correct. let me classic parton, who's a dear friend of mine, was the member of parliament family from ghana, born and raised in there, but he was the one who did the supplies side economics or phenomenal the guy there liz truss, came in and did nothing except talk a little bit and get thrown out. there was no test there. the test was under gordon brown when he was chancellor, when he was prime and the chancellor of the exchequer. the thing from 40 to 50 p and if you go the chart of the exchequer documents that treasury built into their you can see that revenues dropped, the economy went into doldrums, you know, if anything liz truss had was bad politics. she didn't do economics because she didn'
i wish you'd all go back and look at jerry brown's. so can you speak hey you so the principle we all agree with the pragmatist is the question liz truss is an example tell us what happened with liz truss and what lesson what pragmatic pragmatic lessons can we learn from what z truss di wrong despite the fact that we know she has the principles? correct. let me classic parton, who's a dear friend of mine, was the member of parliament family from ghana, born and raised in there, but he was the...
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May 28, 2023
05/23
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starr center, for the study of the american experience, the john carter brown library at brown university, as well as a research center at the of congress. he helped the new york times disunion series, which i know many of you enjoyed throughout the sesquicentennial. and his latest book is lincoln on the verge. i have my copy right here with me. 13 days to washington is the recipient of book from the lincoln forum, as well as the society of presidential. and it's going to be the subject of our conversation today and. it's a wonderful book. let me get that out of the way. i recommend it to you all. it's a captivating story. i really like how vividly it conveys the human drama lincoln's journey from illinois to washington, d.c.. february 1861. he's going to take up the presidency of the united states during, what, of course, was one of the most volatile, maybe most volatile, precarious of american history. so a fantastic topic. and i thought could start just by asking you to tell us a little bit about how you chose topic and what the main goals of the book were when you set out to write the
starr center, for the study of the american experience, the john carter brown library at brown university, as well as a research center at the of congress. he helped the new york times disunion series, which i know many of you enjoyed throughout the sesquicentennial. and his latest book is lincoln on the verge. i have my copy right here with me. 13 days to washington is the recipient of book from the lincoln forum, as well as the society of presidential. and it's going to be the subject of our...
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May 11, 2023
05/23
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thank you, mister chair. >> thank, you senator brown. lastly, we want to recognize senator j.d. vance, mr. vance, you may begin. >> great, thank you. so, i want to start by acknowledging people of east palestine and the ohio epa has done a great job on this tragedy. i just want to say i think our leadership, our media, and our politicians were slow to respond to this crisis. in part because a certain segment of our leadership feels like the people of east palestine are little out of style. they have the wrong politics, they're little to world, maybe a little too white. i want to thank senator capito and senator carper, the chairman ranking member, that all of you are paying attention to those who are caring about this issue, and for showing leadership. i think the most important message to the people of east palestine is that we will not forget about them in the months and years to come. i think this committee hearing reinforces that message. it's very personally meaningful for me to be here. i want to also talk about something that hasn't gotten enough attention, but i think it
thank you, mister chair. >> thank, you senator brown. lastly, we want to recognize senator j.d. vance, mr. vance, you may begin. >> great, thank you. so, i want to start by acknowledging people of east palestine and the ohio epa has done a great job on this tragedy. i just want to say i think our leadership, our media, and our politicians were slow to respond to this crisis. in part because a certain segment of our leadership feels like the people of east palestine are little out of...
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May 10, 2023
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thank you, mister chair. >> thank you, senator brown. i want to recognize senator vance. senator vance, you may begin. >> thank you. i want to start by acknowledging the people of east palestine at the ohio epa has done a great job on this tragedy. i think our leadership, our media, our politicians, were slow to respond to this crisis in part because a certain segment of our leadership feels the people of east palestine are out of style. they have their own politics, a little too rural, maybe a little too white. i want to thank senator capito and senator carper, the chairman ranking member, and all of you for paying attention to this, for caring about this issue, for showing leadership on. the most important mission -- we will not forget about them in the months and years to come. this committee hearing reinforces that message. it's personally meaningful for me to be here. i want to talk about something that hasn't gotten enough attention, but i think is an important part of what's going on right now in east palestine, which is the cleanup of the toxic chemicals in the gr
thank you, mister chair. >> thank you, senator brown. i want to recognize senator vance. senator vance, you may begin. >> thank you. i want to start by acknowledging the people of east palestine at the ohio epa has done a great job on this tragedy. i think our leadership, our media, our politicians, were slow to respond to this crisis in part because a certain segment of our leadership feels the people of east palestine are out of style. they have their own politics, a little too...
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May 26, 2023
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his name wasn't too far from the crabs because brown and kraft. so i'd see what he was up to. he told a lot and he was he was taking them, dragging them over the place like zigzag in massachusetts, mostly also here in rhode island. but they were following the railroad. so just as they escaped by a railroad, so rode the railroad to tell their story story. you mentioned something about descendants. have you met the families. i have had the honor of meeting a number of their descendants and honestly it's been one of the most enriching parts of this journey for me. i'm thinking actually about the previous presentation on jefferson because there's a connection there to of the descendants who i have the honor to know is peggy trotter. damon priestley was an oral historian and a poet and a freedom writer. she is also descended from the hemings and and actually several other really famous, illustrious people. but she and other other kraft family members have been incredibly welcoming and, wise and storing and sharing many stories that, you know, as again, as a previous presenter was d
his name wasn't too far from the crabs because brown and kraft. so i'd see what he was up to. he told a lot and he was he was taking them, dragging them over the place like zigzag in massachusetts, mostly also here in rhode island. but they were following the railroad. so just as they escaped by a railroad, so rode the railroad to tell their story story. you mentioned something about descendants. have you met the families. i have had the honor of meeting a number of their descendants and...
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May 6, 2023
05/23
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he's at brown. and as soon as i hear his voice, i said, what happened? he said, daddy had i was doing an assignment for my anthropology class in this upscale neighborhood in providence and i'm sitting there and the police drive by and hang a u-turn. and he pulls up and they get out the car. and he comes up to me. he says, who are you and why are you here? and he says, sir, my name is langston and i'm here doing an assignment. and leans over and he says, the park closes at such and such a time. and he says, yes, sir, i know. but it's only it's only. and then the officer leans over again, touches his gun and says, the park closes at such and such a time. he touches his girlfriend. they get up and have to leave. and so i'm thinking, okay, what if he had a bad day, right? and he didn't follow instruction, then the boy comes home for the summer he's going to work for. he's working for a nonprofit lobbying the state legislature around capital punishment stuff, criminal justice reform. he had on one of those tight h&m suits. i don't know how these kids wear the
he's at brown. and as soon as i hear his voice, i said, what happened? he said, daddy had i was doing an assignment for my anthropology class in this upscale neighborhood in providence and i'm sitting there and the police drive by and hang a u-turn. and he pulls up and they get out the car. and he comes up to me. he says, who are you and why are you here? and he says, sir, my name is langston and i'm here doing an assignment. and leans over and he says, the park closes at such and such a time....
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May 6, 2023
05/23
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you guys know how brown versus topeka. it wasn't just about the legislation and separate but equal no good. now got to integrate the schools. what is? the whole civil rights movement. it's about making the people to brown you go to little rock in 57. are you complying going to the brown decision? you go to france elementary school and orleans with ruby bridges. are you complying king ruckelshaus is the burn telling polluting companies extraction, industries, chemical industries? we're busting you. the feds are busting you. you're not applying you're following epa standards or nepa or the clean act, which nixon signed in 1970 and soon to be clean water act of 1972. and so by the time nixon leaves, that was the end of a revolution was bipartisan in spirit. it had republicans nixon, ruckelshaus, russell, a guy named russell train who helped the world wildlife fund, a republican side. john salley, republican congressman mccloskey. it had frank church in in gaylord nelson in real environment. well, senators have supreme court j
you guys know how brown versus topeka. it wasn't just about the legislation and separate but equal no good. now got to integrate the schools. what is? the whole civil rights movement. it's about making the people to brown you go to little rock in 57. are you complying going to the brown decision? you go to france elementary school and orleans with ruby bridges. are you complying king ruckelshaus is the burn telling polluting companies extraction, industries, chemical industries? we're busting...
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May 10, 2023
05/23
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it seems to me the only certain brown people are called brown -- othered are called black. that doesn't make sense. is that not a color cast system? the second question is, isn't it suspicious that after they were -- non europeans americans are that they do redistricting? and a red line? that's wrong. thank you. >> i think this is the discussion about how people should be referred to patients race in their ethnicity. to me, people should be for two as they wish to be referred. as -- and should define their own ethnicity. for me, i embrace being called black. i embraced being called african american. i am proud to be an american. but to say i'm an american is not completely defining who i am. what my history and ancestors and ethnicity is because i have to give do credence in respect to those who have come before me and my family. and our history. it goes back when my father side through haiti, west africa, my mother side through the plantation, louisiana, back to west africa. and so the question i think, is, for someone who may be latino, what would you like to be called? a
it seems to me the only certain brown people are called brown -- othered are called black. that doesn't make sense. is that not a color cast system? the second question is, isn't it suspicious that after they were -- non europeans americans are that they do redistricting? and a red line? that's wrong. thank you. >> i think this is the discussion about how people should be referred to patients race in their ethnicity. to me, people should be for two as they wish to be referred. as -- and...
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May 31, 2023
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liz brown is the author of twilight man. also written for book forum eldercare, london review of books, los angeles times, new times, book review and other publications and she never sleeps. craig seligman has written for and edited at a host of magazines, journals, newspapers, website sites. now. so there is so many i not list them all or we'd be here all night. he is the author of sontag and how opposites attract me. and now his new book is about the history of drag. yes. and i'm not talking. so further ado, liz and craig. hi, everybody thanks for coming. i'm going to read very briefly from the introduction, the book, and then liz and i are going to have conversation about it and. then i'll open the floor to questions. i really love embarrassing questions. so. i chose the introduction because it's something i don't have to context juls and i'm guessing that not all of you know, who doris fish was. doris was drag who was born in australia. sydney in 1952 and died in san francisco in 1991. doris fish was a made up person in
liz brown is the author of twilight man. also written for book forum eldercare, london review of books, los angeles times, new times, book review and other publications and she never sleeps. craig seligman has written for and edited at a host of magazines, journals, newspapers, website sites. now. so there is so many i not list them all or we'd be here all night. he is the author of sontag and how opposites attract me. and now his new book is about the history of drag. yes. and i'm not talking....
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May 24, 2023
05/23
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well became a writer residence for the roger brown residency and. social justice writing and sport at the university of dayton. three years ago. tiger came came along and was runner up for the literary peace and as i say, he shares his themes in profile profiles unusual, groundbreaking american stories like haygood himself. each story uses particular talents to bring him closer to justice and peace. bring us closer to justice and peace and we are 20, 19. excuse. as will himself said, race is the story of our times. we overlook race at our own peril. i think people are growing more, more interested and intrigued with how writers can pull back the curtains beat. in rwanda or liberia or bosnia or america to show the reality of on the ground. through his writings and lectures at the intersection, politics, history and race across racial, cultural and various media as a way to open eyes to the need of reflection. for reflection dialog and change. he brings enlightened to us all. and so it's my honor to present the dayton literary peace, the 2022 ambassad
well became a writer residence for the roger brown residency and. social justice writing and sport at the university of dayton. three years ago. tiger came came along and was runner up for the literary peace and as i say, he shares his themes in profile profiles unusual, groundbreaking american stories like haygood himself. each story uses particular talents to bring him closer to justice and peace. bring us closer to justice and peace and we are 20, 19. excuse. as will himself said, race is...
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May 17, 2023
05/23
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brown. last month, we tried to do a package of bills called the elizabeth owe veterans program for 2023. these were five bills that were introduced in this committee that we combined. they were sent out in committee in february, anonymously. however many of my colleagues blocked it from advancing. what this bill did, as well you well know, i believe, it improved options for veterans to save money in the long run. and improve quality of life, with the use of medicinal cannabis for treating the invisible wounds of war. they would be interviewing veterans and finding out the impact that cannabis has had on them. it would help native americans and alaska veterans to achieve ownership of homes. i know that pva was a supporter of this legislation. can you tell us what this means for your organization? >> the members of this committee will know that the number of veterans are going to be needing long term care is expected to significantly increase over the next decade. and it's important that va im
brown. last month, we tried to do a package of bills called the elizabeth owe veterans program for 2023. these were five bills that were introduced in this committee that we combined. they were sent out in committee in february, anonymously. however many of my colleagues blocked it from advancing. what this bill did, as well you well know, i believe, it improved options for veterans to save money in the long run. and improve quality of life, with the use of medicinal cannabis for treating the...
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May 2, 2023
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now, they've also got some boys in norman patrick brown is still alive. he's he was one of them. they were 15 years old, threatened. and intimidated to testify that they things that they did not see now they had recanted all of that in the first trial. so. when they took the stand in the second trial, judge benson them from talking about having been threatened and intimidated to say something that was a lie previously. so again, to keep out any evidence of misconduct by the fbi and by the u.s. attorney's office. but i've spoken to norman, who's still alive, who said i was you know, it had these, you know, reminiscent of george floyd that norman told me one of the agents took his knee and put into his neck, letting him know that you were going to testify. by the way, we need you to testify. but but, norman, to credit recanted that testimony in the trial, kept out of the second trial that that he had been forced into saying these. so we're back to there's one piece of the evidence that they've got shell casing now the jury is shown autopsy photos it's got nothing to do with who pul
now, they've also got some boys in norman patrick brown is still alive. he's he was one of them. they were 15 years old, threatened. and intimidated to testify that they things that they did not see now they had recanted all of that in the first trial. so. when they took the stand in the second trial, judge benson them from talking about having been threatened and intimidated to say something that was a lie previously. so again, to keep out any evidence of misconduct by the fbi and by the u.s....
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May 7, 2023
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plessy withdrew a right, which then brown helped restore roe extended the right which dobbs now withdraws and. i think that's that was a problematic for the court. it could have taken even being mindful of sort of the states rights argument it could have taken a much more deliberate. i think that was a badly decided case. now don't come back to me in four months when i am cheering the of affirmative action in harvard north carolina cases who wasn't who said a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin small minds. it was emerson so i'm going by his standard but i. i expect the court will reverse reverse sparky and those decisions. i think it'll actually be good for the country and i acknowledge the inconsistency i'm not sure it is inconsistent because berkeley took away a right the right to be treated fairly and that's true you know i've never understood how saying to somebody going to end discrimination by discriminating against and in berkeley essentially you know created a right to discriminate particularly if just happen to be bright and asian american for example i'm with you the court has
plessy withdrew a right, which then brown helped restore roe extended the right which dobbs now withdraws and. i think that's that was a problematic for the court. it could have taken even being mindful of sort of the states rights argument it could have taken a much more deliberate. i think that was a badly decided case. now don't come back to me in four months when i am cheering the of affirmative action in harvard north carolina cases who wasn't who said a foolish consistency is the...
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May 22, 2023
05/23
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the fellow in the rear is brown from east is now a bellhop at the falmouth hotel portland. he said, mr. ames, i came pretty near falling in, but he landed on shore. all right. this scene is the men having their lunch they have for lunch is a day of breakfast for o'clock. first lunch, 9:00. second lunch, two in the afternoon and supper when they get in at night, first lunch and they have can be boiled ham, hard boiled eggs, biscuit donuts, cookies and tea. second lunch they have tea cookies, donut biscuit and ham. this is roll -- ledge in the summertime one can walk across this led with shoes when the water is turned on to make a driving hit, it spreads out on this leg so the logs roll over this is a beautiful sight in most interest in to see these log rolling, tumbling, pounding all day long, the day after i took this view, a body of logs came down in the night and formed a wing on the opposite shore and had to be dynamited off. the next scene is taken a mile below where young morrison of brittany ville and another fellow attending this station to see that the logs don't fr
the fellow in the rear is brown from east is now a bellhop at the falmouth hotel portland. he said, mr. ames, i came pretty near falling in, but he landed on shore. all right. this scene is the men having their lunch they have for lunch is a day of breakfast for o'clock. first lunch, 9:00. second lunch, two in the afternoon and supper when they get in at night, first lunch and they have can be boiled ham, hard boiled eggs, biscuit donuts, cookies and tea. second lunch they have tea cookies,...
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May 23, 2023
05/23
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and often those schools are, black and brown. so when we talk about that issue, we have a whole chapter on education. the future of america, obviously, is our children. we cannot should not have the highest rate of childhood poverty of almost any nation. tell me about our child care system. it is a disaster. anyone to deny that we have we have a huge cost. in my state of vermont, it costs $15,000 a year, which is about average nationally to send your kid. to talk to your working class person. you making 50, $60,000 a year. how can you afford it? meanwhile, there are not enough slots. people can't find childcare and meanwhile the workers in child care are earning starvation wages. so the question we ask, if we take seriously that these little kids are the future of america, why don't we? why don't we treat them with respect that they need and provide the best quality education? teaching child working in a child care center is one of the most important jobs that we can do. and yet we're paying people starvation, wages that's the qu
and often those schools are, black and brown. so when we talk about that issue, we have a whole chapter on education. the future of america, obviously, is our children. we cannot should not have the highest rate of childhood poverty of almost any nation. tell me about our child care system. it is a disaster. anyone to deny that we have we have a huge cost. in my state of vermont, it costs $15,000 a year, which is about average nationally to send your kid. to talk to your working class person....
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May 22, 2023
05/23
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and often those schools are, black and brown. so when we talk about that issue, we have a whole chapter on education. the future of america, obviously, is our children. we cannot should not have the highest rate of childhood poverty of almost any nation. tell me about our child care system. it is a disaster. anyone to deny that we have we have a huge cost. in my state of vermont, it costs $15,000 a year, which is about average nationally to send your kid. to talk to your working class person. you making 50, $60,000 a year. how can you afford it? meanwhile, there are not enough slots. people can't find childcare and meanwhile the workers in child care are earning starvation wages. so the question we ask, if we take seriously that these little kids are the future of america, why don't we? why don't we treat them with respect that they need and provide the best quality education? teaching child working in a child care center is one of the most important jobs that we can do. and yet we're paying people starvation, wages that's the qu
and often those schools are, black and brown. so when we talk about that issue, we have a whole chapter on education. the future of america, obviously, is our children. we cannot should not have the highest rate of childhood poverty of almost any nation. tell me about our child care system. it is a disaster. anyone to deny that we have we have a huge cost. in my state of vermont, it costs $15,000 a year, which is about average nationally to send your kid. to talk to your working class person....