0
0.0
Apr 8, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
[applause] alabama is a pro-life state. i am more committed than ever to protecting the sanctity of life and as i have said on this occasion last year our work is not done. this evening i am proud to declare we will foster a culture of life. we must refocus our efforts to do more to support life. last year commissioner nancy putnam the department of human resources had great success in foster care adoptions. focused on enhancing childcare quality. i am proud to double down on these efforts. to foster a better culture of life we must also do more to support alabamians. in early onset of medical care is necessary for mothers and children. while we are making significant strides we still face challenges especially in rural alabama. that's why i'm proud to support a pilot program that will start posting men and women in nine county health diploma yet -- in areas of need. folks there's nothing more important than our alabama families. we must come together to find common ground on many ways to support them. the success of any st
[applause] alabama is a pro-life state. i am more committed than ever to protecting the sanctity of life and as i have said on this occasion last year our work is not done. this evening i am proud to declare we will foster a culture of life. we must refocus our efforts to do more to support life. last year commissioner nancy putnam the department of human resources had great success in foster care adoptions. focused on enhancing childcare quality. i am proud to double down on these efforts. to...
0
0.0
Apr 11, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
body conducting a field hearing in alabama talking to alabama voters about just that point, modern discrimination that alabamians are experiencing and we are seeing have russ the country. i would like to actually instead of landing there, he said something in testimony in response to an earlier question, that i would love to press on a little bit to understand more, you said that you are often -- your office uses to get mapping software for counties and disabilities and by expressing that accurately quick >> for the county boards and registrars.>> so that is helpful, because i noted earlier this month, 6000 voters in alabama's newly drawn section of the district, election postcards with incorrect voter information. and i appreciate your office as said before that you were not involved in handing out those postcards. can you talk a little bit about the intersection between the challenges of alabama voters not getting the correct information, and what you say your office helps to provide with elections and why your office has nothing to do with voters in alabama getting incorrect information for th
body conducting a field hearing in alabama talking to alabama voters about just that point, modern discrimination that alabamians are experiencing and we are seeing have russ the country. i would like to actually instead of landing there, he said something in testimony in response to an earlier question, that i would love to press on a little bit to understand more, you said that you are often -- your office uses to get mapping software for counties and disabilities and by expressing that...
0
0.0
Apr 10, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
or maybe targeting alabama. we work across the many platforms to make sure we are ready to fend off any type of cyber attack and alabama. >> thank you. what are some of the unique challenges that local election officials face in mitigating those cybersecurity threats? if you can turn your microphone on. >> the big one i think obviously would be the disinformation. if somebody were to hack a website of ours and try to change information or results or something of that nature and also the it -- of ai impersonating myself. perhaps polling place changes or deadline changes. things of that nature. we were fortunate and the fact that in douglas county, we have a group called the douglas omaha technology commission. it is a joint venture. they really are the experts on technology, cybersecurity and things of that nature. and so they have provided all of that. i also have two gentlemen in- house and election system in the technology department. they created our website and they maintain our website. if something were to
or maybe targeting alabama. we work across the many platforms to make sure we are ready to fend off any type of cyber attack and alabama. >> thank you. what are some of the unique challenges that local election officials face in mitigating those cybersecurity threats? if you can turn your microphone on. >> the big one i think obviously would be the disinformation. if somebody were to hack a website of ours and try to change information or results or something of that nature and also...
0
0.0
Apr 25, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and then you go to alabama and you have people with very different points of view. so the narrative in new york is that the people in alabama are, you know, not as intelligent as the people in new york. and i'm sure that if you ask the people in alabama, they would think that the people in new york are just these crazy woke people who have these misguided views that that can't really stand up. so the idea is that, you know, any idea ought to be able to stand up to argument and, you know, that's what i would like to see much more of in this country. and then there's a there's a much more sinister side of it in that, you know, the big tech platforms, the internet started out as this incredible opportunity for just maximum, um, diversity that every kind of idea, you know, was there somewhere and if you were willing to do a little bit of research, you could find it. but then at some point, it kind of all went south. and what happened there is that people discovered that you can control the internet. so that the internet becomes the best possible source of censorship tha
and then you go to alabama and you have people with very different points of view. so the narrative in new york is that the people in alabama are, you know, not as intelligent as the people in new york. and i'm sure that if you ask the people in alabama, they would think that the people in new york are just these crazy woke people who have these misguided views that that can't really stand up. so the idea is that, you know, any idea ought to be able to stand up to argument and, you know, that's...
0
0.0
Apr 7, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
like many other american colleges, tuskegee institute in alabama has been graduating qualified players for some time. the united states army forces stationed at tuskegee field hold classes on the campus to teach the fundamentals of ground school. tuskegee shops, prepare students for jobs, aviation plants. the work of dr. carver is well known pilot tuskegee. he has contributed much to the science of nutrition and is now using his talents and his knowledge in the war effort. other tuskegee scientists are also working to improve diets at home with the need of greater quantities of alcohol for war uses. scientists are working methods to get alcohol out of agricultural products using an improved process. these scientists get more alcohol from the plentiful sweet potato than ever before. many courses like this automotive class are given to women who learn to fill jobs vacated by men gone to war. prairie view, one of the state colleges of texas, is courses to supply trained and women to the increasingly technical fields of industrial military service in the agriculture department, students st
like many other american colleges, tuskegee institute in alabama has been graduating qualified players for some time. the united states army forces stationed at tuskegee field hold classes on the campus to teach the fundamentals of ground school. tuskegee shops, prepare students for jobs, aviation plants. the work of dr. carver is well known pilot tuskegee. he has contributed much to the science of nutrition and is now using his talents and his knowledge in the war effort. other tuskegee...
0
0.0
Apr 7, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
go down and see wallace in alabama the head of the republican delegation in north carolina is wavering a little bit on nixon and graham is again used to twist his arm a little bit and stay loyal to nixon graham is very involved, you know, throughout campaign and these messages continue to be passed back and forth between all the major. this is a second one there's more we could talk about, but we just don't have time. this is the second one i want to talk about in september. so september is the traditional kickoff for the campaign back then. can we lose this distinction today when campaigns are going on all the time? but campaigns back then would kick off labor day, like the monday after labor day, you'd have a big opening rally. you're kind of throwing it into gear. you know, and you'll stay in that gear all the way until november on day. so right after labor day and 68. graham, is that that i showed you, we'll go back to that for a minute. that rally in pittsburgh was. this is just after labor day. graham as far as i can tell, this was just coincidental, is in pittsburgh for a series
go down and see wallace in alabama the head of the republican delegation in north carolina is wavering a little bit on nixon and graham is again used to twist his arm a little bit and stay loyal to nixon graham is very involved, you know, throughout campaign and these messages continue to be passed back and forth between all the major. this is a second one there's more we could talk about, but we just don't have time. this is the second one i want to talk about in september. so september is the...
0
0.0
Apr 6, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
george drake was a newspaper from union springs, alabama, and he traveled all the way from alabama to come here in lancaster so he could eyeball these people. thaddeus stevens of they were some of the most renowned people in the country in their time. lydia was as well. no matter anybody locally would try to, say. and after he seen them, i think he went to the house. south queen street and and after he'd been here he decided i think he wrote this before he ev home to alabama. he said in the city of lancaster, thaddeus steas for years lived an open adultery from her husband, a full blooded --. this mulatto manages h household both in lancaster and in washington, receives the rejectisitors that will speaks of mr. stephens and hersel as we add in, all things comports herself as if she enjoy rights owful wif she is a neat, tidy housekeeper, appears to be polite and well trained as. -- generally are. i only mention the fact th stephens is doing this, that the ultra godly superstar defied saints of the african ascendancy own eye because stephens had condemned white plan owners for for forci
george drake was a newspaper from union springs, alabama, and he traveled all the way from alabama to come here in lancaster so he could eyeball these people. thaddeus stevens of they were some of the most renowned people in the country in their time. lydia was as well. no matter anybody locally would try to, say. and after he seen them, i think he went to the house. south queen street and and after he'd been here he decided i think he wrote this before he ev home to alabama. he said in the...
0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and it was made to me so evident by the alabama supreme court decision regarding ivf. and i just want to share with you and while people are coming to the mike just briefly, if you want to talk about this. you can i was very taken. i read almost the entirety of the supreme court decision. i don't recommend it, but i do recommend reading chief justice parker, special concurrence that he wrote at the end, which was me. quite amazing. he talked about quote unquote, the sanctity of life in supporting his decision. and then he quoted for some ari's and steve the british common law, quoting sir william blackstone, why we in america are british common law? i have no idea. he does talk. life is the immediate of god, which is inherent in every human being from blackstone. and then he goes on to the declaration and again supporting its decision, the line from the declaration that we're endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights among these are life. in order to substantiate that an embryo has has got life equivalent to you and me. and then finally, which i find most
and it was made to me so evident by the alabama supreme court decision regarding ivf. and i just want to share with you and while people are coming to the mike just briefly, if you want to talk about this. you can i was very taken. i read almost the entirety of the supreme court decision. i don't recommend it, but i do recommend reading chief justice parker, special concurrence that he wrote at the end, which was me. quite amazing. he talked about quote unquote, the sanctity of life in...
0
0.0
Apr 6, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the alabama redistricting case is a good example of that. but more fundamentally, again, i mean, it just reinforces the whole point when folks like me get criticized because of our politics, it really drives home why it's so important to talk about the court as an institution and to talk about the court context in which we're not focusing on the outcomes. we're focusing on the court's behavior even when the outcomes are ones we like. so talk a lot about authority, originalism, succeeding when mainstream politicians tolerate it and you make the same point. why do you think those politicians have failed? treat the extremists as pariahs? why are they all afraid of trump? why are they all afraid of whatever they're afraid of? for a bunch of reasons. very, very important point. a no individual can kill a democracy on their own, whether they are or elected leaders, demagogues it. they always require accomplices. accomplices that come from the mainstream political. and so any time a democracy breaks down, you find a slew of mainstay politicians, po
the alabama redistricting case is a good example of that. but more fundamentally, again, i mean, it just reinforces the whole point when folks like me get criticized because of our politics, it really drives home why it's so important to talk about the court as an institution and to talk about the court context in which we're not focusing on the outcomes. we're focusing on the court's behavior even when the outcomes are ones we like. so talk a lot about authority, originalism, succeeding when...
0
0.0
Apr 15, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the alabama claims the virginia affair and gold resumption. while it could not omit some form of the corruption narrative without seeming incomplete, it might be that historians care about reconstruction, but less so about other issues that have been distorted. they might not realize how much distortions on other issues are the spillover effect of the polemic accounts from the years when. the dunning interpretation prevailed. a presidential historians who have not focused on grant should have tried more than they have to apply the same judicious approach to all presidencies. so there are the basic points that i make in my essay. i don't want to omit course the many other essays we have from so many contributors covering grant's military, his political career, as well as so many aspects of his personal life life. and let me chime in real quickly. see a lot of folks sounding off in the chat saying where they're from. we appreciate that. i've seen a couple of people post some questions there. please put your questions in the q&a that'll allow us
the alabama claims the virginia affair and gold resumption. while it could not omit some form of the corruption narrative without seeming incomplete, it might be that historians care about reconstruction, but less so about other issues that have been distorted. they might not realize how much distortions on other issues are the spillover effect of the polemic accounts from the years when. the dunning interpretation prevailed. a presidential historians who have not focused on grant should have...
0
0.0
Apr 6, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
places like south carolina, mississippi, florida, alabama, they're going to the county seats of those places, various counties, and holding the hearings. so they're actually going into the south and holding those hearings a little bit different than what we understand for congressional hearings today, though, they do hold hearings in washington, d.c., as well. there are the the chairman of the of the committee is going to be in a pennsylvania senator named john scott. there's going to be 21 members on the on the committee as a whole of five of them are republican senators. five of them are. two of them are democrat senators. eight are going to be republican members of the house and six are going to be democratic members of the south or of democratic members of the house. out of that number, you've got six of those that are going to be former confederate states and three of them on top of that or forming former slaveholding states. right. so not all states that were slaveholding, of course, became part of the confederacy. so you have nine total members of that that committee that are f
places like south carolina, mississippi, florida, alabama, they're going to the county seats of those places, various counties, and holding the hearings. so they're actually going into the south and holding those hearings a little bit different than what we understand for congressional hearings today, though, they do hold hearings in washington, d.c., as well. there are the the chairman of the of the committee is going to be in a pennsylvania senator named john scott. there's going to be 21...
0
0.0
Apr 3, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in alabama, a movie star in hollywood. or it might be your blood. it was ever. it is. thanks. 36 planes left this field this morning. now six more arrived. that makes 20 home. and this one's one more wounded. 22 coming in with his left inboard dead. 23 with a feathered prop on his left outboard engine. 24 southern comfort with a chunk of tail gone, 25 i flew on that luck. 26 not a scratch scratch. the control tower that two more landed at a british field to the south. want a crash landing crew safe that. makes 2829 a rough landing, but a pilot's hurt wondering brought it back at all. 29 planes back so far, 29 out of 36 are losses were heavy, but the enemies were far heavier. we destroyed a german aircraft factory, a rail junction submarine docks and harbor installations. that's the specific known damage. but who can tell the number german torpedoes that will not be fired? the number of our convoys that will get through now the soldiers and seamen's lives that will be saved or the battles that will be won instead of lost because of what these and airmen did today. pilot
in alabama, a movie star in hollywood. or it might be your blood. it was ever. it is. thanks. 36 planes left this field this morning. now six more arrived. that makes 20 home. and this one's one more wounded. 22 coming in with his left inboard dead. 23 with a feathered prop on his left outboard engine. 24 southern comfort with a chunk of tail gone, 25 i flew on that luck. 26 not a scratch scratch. the control tower that two more landed at a british field to the south. want a crash landing crew...
0
0.0
Apr 21, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
but this is a lady named wanda from alabama who wrote this pleading letter to kefauver saying that the south was in trouble, that this has been going on for a long time. the situation is dire. she does not offer a lot of detail, but it's a very she's obviously very upset about what ever it is that she she knows most of the letters he received that were very specific. they named names. they had dates. they had specific information about what was going on and where and when. the correspondence files organized by state and can just scan the boxes and look and see that the southern states are full. they're thick files of letters from people detailing these kinds of activities and over and over again, people are making the same kinds of complaints about their local problems. these are local problems that they would always say they are linked to problems in other cities, other states, other parts of the country. they know the kefauver committee is looking at interstate commerce. they know that they've got to get his attention to this. they really tended to highlight that. and as i mentioned
but this is a lady named wanda from alabama who wrote this pleading letter to kefauver saying that the south was in trouble, that this has been going on for a long time. the situation is dire. she does not offer a lot of detail, but it's a very she's obviously very upset about what ever it is that she she knows most of the letters he received that were very specific. they named names. they had dates. they had specific information about what was going on and where and when. the correspondence...
0
0.0
Apr 22, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
but this is a lady named wanda from alabama who wrote this pleading letter to kefauver saying that the south was in trouble, that this has been going on for a long time. the situation is dire. she does not offer a lot of detail, but it's a very she's obviously very upset about what ever it is that she she knows most of the letters he received that were very specific. they named names. they had dates. they had specific information about what was going on and where and when. the correspondence files organized by state and can just scan the boxes and look and see that the southern states are full. they're thick files of letters from people detailing these kinds of activities and over and over again, people are making the same kinds of complaints about their local problems. these are local problems that they would always say they are linked to problems in other cities, other states, other parts of the country. they know the kefauver committee is looking at interstate commerce. they know that they've got to get his attention to this. they really tended to highlight that. and as i mentioned
but this is a lady named wanda from alabama who wrote this pleading letter to kefauver saying that the south was in trouble, that this has been going on for a long time. the situation is dire. she does not offer a lot of detail, but it's a very she's obviously very upset about what ever it is that she she knows most of the letters he received that were very specific. they named names. they had dates. they had specific information about what was going on and where and when. the correspondence...
0
0.0
Apr 1, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
george drake was a newspaper from union springs, alabama, and he traveled all the way from alabama to come here in lancaster so he could eyeball these people. thaddeus stevens of they were some of the most renowned people in the country in their time. lydia was as well. no matter anybody locally would try to, say. and after he seen them, i think he went to the house. south queen street and and after he'd been here he decided i think he wrote this before he even got home to ala he said in the city of lancaster, thaddeus stevens has years lived an open adultery with him. a lot of woman whom he seduced from her husbandll blooded --. this mulatto manages his housboth in lancaster and in washington, receives the rejects as visitors that will speaks of mr. stephens and herself. as w a all things comports herself as if she enjoy rights of a lawful wife. she eat, tidy housekeeper, appears to be polite and well trained as. -- generally are. i only mention the fact that steps doing this, that the ultra godly sup defied saints of the african ascendancy may get the beam out of their own eye becau
george drake was a newspaper from union springs, alabama, and he traveled all the way from alabama to come here in lancaster so he could eyeball these people. thaddeus stevens of they were some of the most renowned people in the country in their time. lydia was as well. no matter anybody locally would try to, say. and after he seen them, i think he went to the house. south queen street and and after he'd been here he decided i think he wrote this before he even got home to ala he said in the...
0
0.0
Apr 2, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
mary frances roberts arrives in mobile, alabama, in 1846. she is interrogated on board a vessel. she's brought into the county jail house. and while she's there, the jailer calls for her. and so she goes to the jailers office. and when she goes to the jailers office, he attempts to sexually assault her. and she's able to escape because the door slightly ajar and somebody happen to be walking by. when he made his when he made his attempt, actually, it was security back to her, sail to her cell and, pulled the cell door, shut. the british council was alerted to this. he filed a number of reports and was sort of this turned into a bit of an international incident. but mary frances roberts was basically a victim of sexual assault. william forrester. he arrived in the territory of florida in 1835. key west. when he arrived there in 1835, this was his second time going to florida and being arrested for being for entering the territory illegally. and because it was the second time the florida statute that allowed for the law to come down very hard on him, his sentence. five years, ensla
mary frances roberts arrives in mobile, alabama, in 1846. she is interrogated on board a vessel. she's brought into the county jail house. and while she's there, the jailer calls for her. and so she goes to the jailers office. and when she goes to the jailers office, he attempts to sexually assault her. and she's able to escape because the door slightly ajar and somebody happen to be walking by. when he made his when he made his attempt, actually, it was security back to her, sail to her cell...
0
0.0
Apr 16, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
tell you this here on the ua s we have the to elegy and in my community where we live in huntsville, alabama re- can block them or drop them or intercept them and it's being used in ukraine and israel but the only thing is you have to request it to make sure it happened so i promise you that i hope we come to reason because when they are coming in and setting down and dropping down drugs and being stuffed full of cash going back to the cartel, it's unacceptable and i take you to your word that you will do something about it. if congress is willing to fund more i.c.e. bed space or near trump level eras, would this be a solution to detaining more illegal aliens? >> the greater the detention capacity, the greater our ability to detain more people and the bipartisan senate legislation funded 50,000 detention beds and that is a powerful example. >> at the beginning of 2022 you testified that congress -- to congress that you had operational control of the border and in the following hearings you backtracked and altered the definition of operational control. in 2024, at a hearing last week, you tes
tell you this here on the ua s we have the to elegy and in my community where we live in huntsville, alabama re- can block them or drop them or intercept them and it's being used in ukraine and israel but the only thing is you have to request it to make sure it happened so i promise you that i hope we come to reason because when they are coming in and setting down and dropping down drugs and being stuffed full of cash going back to the cartel, it's unacceptable and i take you to your word that...
0
0.0
Apr 15, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the alabama state troopers brutally thwarting the march from selma to montgomery to the capital of alabama sorry. from selma to montgomery and the world sees this and soon thereafter we get voting rights enshrined into law. it's amazing that the american people are basically fair, but they have to be exposed to what's wrong in order to do what's right. the black who made that march from selma to montgomery had toilet paper and toothbrushes in their purses because they weren't sure they were going to make it. and it was equally likely they would end up in jail. i, you know, i, i about that there was a lot of work, you know, really leading to the what we know is, the modern day civil rights movement. i remember once someone told me. that was trying to get involved in my project. i interview black people about their lives and we've interviewed like. 3600 people and 451 cities and tells that they told that, you know, black people hadn't done anything before the modern day civil rights movement. so i think that this i go back to this issue of, you know, this taboo issue, slavery, because i beli
the alabama state troopers brutally thwarting the march from selma to montgomery to the capital of alabama sorry. from selma to montgomery and the world sees this and soon thereafter we get voting rights enshrined into law. it's amazing that the american people are basically fair, but they have to be exposed to what's wrong in order to do what's right. the black who made that march from selma to montgomery had toilet paper and toothbrushes in their purses because they weren't sure they were...