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Apr 3, 2024
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was pj foley the instigator and was robert lewis guilty on the big picture, robert lewis was innocent until proven guilty. he was and is an innocent man. whether or not he committed the offense legally, you know, there's a difference between being legally responsible, criminally and then actually committing offense. you can commit an offense but not be held criminally liable. o.j. simpson's example, he was found not guilty on a criminal trial where the burden of proof is high. but on civil trial, where the burden is much lower, he's found liable for wrongful death. so you you know it could it can be witnessed. and there have been cases where people have been acquitted of murders. and then afterwards the murderers go, yeah, that they can't tried again. double jeopardy applies. so it does happen. it's rare. on june 22nd, 2022, the 130th anniversary, something that i didn't think would ever happen. a historical marker was erected and dedicated at the site of the lynching it was done in cooperation with a group called the friends of robert louis, who had been getting together for a few ye
was pj foley the instigator and was robert lewis guilty on the big picture, robert lewis was innocent until proven guilty. he was and is an innocent man. whether or not he committed the offense legally, you know, there's a difference between being legally responsible, criminally and then actually committing offense. you can commit an offense but not be held criminally liable. o.j. simpson's example, he was found not guilty on a criminal trial where the burden of proof is high. but on civil...
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Apr 4, 2024
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robert hanssen over at fbi. and an amount has she was a spy for cuba, worked for the defense intelligence agency. so these people, it's so painful when you find out that they betrayed your trust. and so this gallery shows why it's so important to make sure we keep our counter measures strong here at cia. so in in this gallery, we have a lot of different artifacts related to these traitors. we have the monitor that aims at his computer station, got a card from robert hanssen, as well as the badge for for an a montez who was just released from prison after serving 20 years for spying on us for cuba. a double agent working at the defense intelligence agency here at cia, many different parts of media, a website, cia gov through twitter, through facebook, we have our artifacts on display for the american to see. they might not be able to come to this museum to see physically because we are here at cia headquarters and that security overlay doesn't allow visitors to come in from off the street. but we hope that the am
robert hanssen over at fbi. and an amount has she was a spy for cuba, worked for the defense intelligence agency. so these people, it's so painful when you find out that they betrayed your trust. and so this gallery shows why it's so important to make sure we keep our counter measures strong here at cia. so in in this gallery, we have a lot of different artifacts related to these traitors. we have the monitor that aims at his computer station, got a card from robert hanssen, as well as the...
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Apr 19, 2024
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chief justice roberts: justice barrett? justice barrett: going t give you a chance to adesyour friend on the other si's argument that we lack risdiction because of the qualieimmunity question, they also say that the claim for injunction is no longer in the case because you dn't cross-appeal it. i want to give you a chance to address that. mr. cole: this court did not disttself of jurisdiction when they granted the case and ask fobrfing on only one of the questionsrented. if the court reverses on the first amendmen ground, it would be totally appropriate to send back to the second circuit to reconser the qualified immunity question, which is respondent rest gued in the second circuit inexorably intertwined with theerit determination. the court's assessment of the merits is the basic disregard of what happened at lloyd's, adopting every inference in favor of vullo and against the nra wi rpect to the guidance tts. all of that infected not just th merit determination, but the qualified immunity determination. the court has juri
chief justice roberts: justice barrett? justice barrett: going t give you a chance to adesyour friend on the other si's argument that we lack risdiction because of the qualieimmunity question, they also say that the claim for injunction is no longer in the case because you dn't cross-appeal it. i want to give you a chance to address that. mr. cole: this court did not disttself of jurisdiction when they granted the case and ask fobrfing on only one of the questionsrented. if the court reverses...
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Apr 8, 2024
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robert kennedy wins the indiana primary. you know, he goes around the state is very happy with the way he's treated by indiana voters felt that they gave him a chance. they listened to what he had to say and they resonated with his message. from there, can be went on to win a primaries in nebraska they go on mccarthy and kennedy out to western primaries. mccarthy actually defeats kennedy in the oregon primary the first time any kennedy had lost an election. and so it comes down to the california primary. the big prize with the most delegates. kennedy ekes out a narrow victory in early june, the evening after he wins the california primary. he's at the ambassador hotel in los angeles. he takes a shortcut through the kitchen there and is shot by sirhan sirhan as assassinated and dies a few hours later. i think kennedy's coming to indianapolis shows you the part, the chance plays in history. sometimes you had all these things that had to come together to bring kennedy to indianapolis on april 4th, to make those remarks to the c
robert kennedy wins the indiana primary. you know, he goes around the state is very happy with the way he's treated by indiana voters felt that they gave him a chance. they listened to what he had to say and they resonated with his message. from there, can be went on to win a primaries in nebraska they go on mccarthy and kennedy out to western primaries. mccarthy actually defeats kennedy in the oregon primary the first time any kennedy had lost an election. and so it comes down to the...
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Apr 2, 2024
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he's talking to robert e lee. he's writing to robert e lee back in petersburg. and he says, i proceeded. i decided proceed to according to your instructions, and proceed north to washington. and if i find a chance to take it, you will early is telling us not after the war, not in his memoirs, not in a cover your -- report. what exactly he is trying to do go north, threaten washington and if possible, take it. can he hold washington? probably not. but if he takes washington even for a day, what is that going to look like to the lincoln administration? how many of you would vote for a guy that confederates walk into the city? they rob the treasury. they throw the confederate flag above the capitol building. you feel really confident in that guy, right? and so early wants to see what he can do. in the summer of 1864. so he begins to make his way down the valley heading towards harpers ferry. his original intent was to get to harpers ferry. and as you probably all know, right, the confluence of the rivers there, the shenandoah and the potomac rivers, if he can get t
he's talking to robert e lee. he's writing to robert e lee back in petersburg. and he says, i proceeded. i decided proceed to according to your instructions, and proceed north to washington. and if i find a chance to take it, you will early is telling us not after the war, not in his memoirs, not in a cover your -- report. what exactly he is trying to do go north, threaten washington and if possible, take it. can he hold washington? probably not. but if he takes washington even for a day, what...
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Apr 7, 2024
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this is the spot where on april 4th, robert kennedy gave his impromptu speech, so to speak, informing the crowd of martin luther king's assassination. i was in a position on this side. so if you look at the picture up there of robert kennedy at the time he gave his speech, of course, this a collage. but that was that was the angle from which i was looking at. and i was no more than 25 feet away. so i was relatively close being here as early as i was. so i got a good spot. we did get here early. 24 years old at the time, just got out of the navy the year before i came home and in annapolis it changed somewhat. i mean, this was still a predominantly black neighborhood. i had spent four years in the navy and become a journeyman printer and i came home and i couldn't get a job. based on the experience becse. it was 1968 and i was a young black man, basically. so i was here with a group of young people about my age and some maybe a little younger. i wanted to see for myself and hear for myself what he had to say. kennedy was an indian, of course, to enter the any had a democratic president
this is the spot where on april 4th, robert kennedy gave his impromptu speech, so to speak, informing the crowd of martin luther king's assassination. i was in a position on this side. so if you look at the picture up there of robert kennedy at the time he gave his speech, of course, this a collage. but that was that was the angle from which i was looking at. and i was no more than 25 feet away. so i was relatively close being here as early as i was. so i got a good spot. we did get here early....
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Apr 13, 2024
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next question for robert jones. robert, you've written in your book that in order to understand history of discrimination and racism in our country, we have to go back further than the new york times series, which many of you have read. i'm sure 1619, which was when slaves were first brought to america. your date robert is 1514. and why is that. actually i go back little further. the date is 1493. oh. and the book and that that date may sound familiar to many of you. right. because it's a to a date that we all learned about in school. right. in 1492, columbus sailed the ocean. right. i haven't quite come with the right rhyme. jingle like that for 1493, but i'm sure some of you could come up with it and let me know afterward. but it's 1493 and. and what was what i'm doing in the book and in many ways like to kind of connect it up to my case conversation with romney is trying to you know so yes we have like a republican party that's introspective and some of its leaders trying to figure out what happened and how did w
next question for robert jones. robert, you've written in your book that in order to understand history of discrimination and racism in our country, we have to go back further than the new york times series, which many of you have read. i'm sure 1619, which was when slaves were first brought to america. your date robert is 1514. and why is that. actually i go back little further. the date is 1493. oh. and the book and that that date may sound familiar to many of you. right. because it's a to a...
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Apr 28, 2024
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and robert kennedy. robert kennedy was also hired to be assistant counsel on the permanent subcommittee at about the same time in 1953. of course, he was a scion of the massachusetts kennedy family, the democrats and he was an ardent anti-crime. and so were really the kennedy family. the kennedys were very ardent. andy communists and and the patriarch of the kennedy family, joseph kennedy, admired senator mccarthy. so it was not a complete surprise that robert kennedy would would join this effort. but he did not last very long. he began having problems with with roy cohn. they they had very intense conflicts and ultimately had even a fistfight, after which robert kennedy resigned from from a committee staff. okay. with the mccarthy hearings lasting a little over a year, jim townsend. how many hearings were held? were they closed? were they open to the press, etc.? well, there are hundreds and hundreds of hearings, something like 690 hearings. incredible number of hearings were held during this period. th
and robert kennedy. robert kennedy was also hired to be assistant counsel on the permanent subcommittee at about the same time in 1953. of course, he was a scion of the massachusetts kennedy family, the democrats and he was an ardent anti-crime. and so were really the kennedy family. the kennedys were very ardent. andy communists and and the patriarch of the kennedy family, joseph kennedy, admired senator mccarthy. so it was not a complete surprise that robert kennedy would would join this...
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Apr 29, 2024
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and robert kennedy. robert kennedy was also hired to be assistant counsel on the permanent subcommittee at about the same time in 1953. of course, he was a scion of the massachusetts kennedy family, the democrats and he was an ardent anti-crime. and so were really the kennedy family. the kennedys were very ardent. andy communists and and the patriarch of the kennedy family, joseph kennedy, admired senator mccarthy. so it was not a complete surprise that robert kennedy would would join this effort. but he did not last very long. he began having problems with with roy cohn. they they had very intense conflicts and ultimately had even a fistfight, after which robert kennedy resigned from from a committee staff. okay. with the mccarthy hearings lasting a little over a year, jim townsend. how many hearings were held? were they closed? were they open to the press, etc.? well, there are hundreds and hundreds of hearings, something like 690 hearings. incredible number of hearings were held during this period. th
and robert kennedy. robert kennedy was also hired to be assistant counsel on the permanent subcommittee at about the same time in 1953. of course, he was a scion of the massachusetts kennedy family, the democrats and he was an ardent anti-crime. and so were really the kennedy family. the kennedys were very ardent. andy communists and and the patriarch of the kennedy family, joseph kennedy, admired senator mccarthy. so it was not a complete surprise that robert kennedy would would join this...
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Apr 7, 2024
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and democracy chief justice roberts, quote from an arizona public finance of election case. democracy does not depend a level playing field. so, you know again, i mean, i think it's worth but but i mean, this is this is why i think it's so helpful to talk about the court holistically. i mean, right. the the lawyers can break individual opinions and why they or are not so convince them but a world in which the court is actually about congress is world in which it's going to have a much harder time dismantling statutory regimes congress has created. and that's true not just in the election and voting rights base. that's true in the environmental law space. it's true in the dare i say, loan financing case. i mean, it's there are any number of respects in which the less that congress and i don't mean this in a particular just the the more quiescent congress period, the more court will and necessarily is free to be, more adventurous and maybe some those adventures are to our liking and maybe of them are not. but that adventurousness in general is a problem. and that's really the
and democracy chief justice roberts, quote from an arizona public finance of election case. democracy does not depend a level playing field. so, you know again, i mean, i think it's worth but but i mean, this is this is why i think it's so helpful to talk about the court holistically. i mean, right. the the lawyers can break individual opinions and why they or are not so convince them but a world in which the court is actually about congress is world in which it's going to have a much harder...
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Apr 3, 2024
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robert was always deeply to davis for what he did. and davis became a very prominent national figure, and he even was a presidential candidate at point. but he didn't. didn't go anywhere. so thank you. yes. john chamberlain. no relation as a former chicago and your description of davis behavior reminded of the dictum vote early and vote often which may have been by -- daley in 1960. thank you. yes. thank you for your book and your presentation. and i'm from studio city, california. and i wondered, mike, could go to the mike. i wonder if you could share with us your assessment of significance or the insignificance of mr. lincoln's speech in greenwich village, february 27th, 1860. i can't. he you know, in hindsight, often view that trip of lincoln's is propelling him to the presidency. and it it did in a way and made him look like he could be conceivably serious candidate but he still entered that convention. a total long shot and so you know i don't think that that visit was as influential as we tend to to look at it from the vantage p
robert was always deeply to davis for what he did. and davis became a very prominent national figure, and he even was a presidential candidate at point. but he didn't. didn't go anywhere. so thank you. yes. john chamberlain. no relation as a former chicago and your description of davis behavior reminded of the dictum vote early and vote often which may have been by -- daley in 1960. thank you. yes. thank you for your book and your presentation. and i'm from studio city, california. and i...
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Apr 27, 2024
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is mckay coppins, robert jones and tim alberta to let i made their introductions i'm going to make it sure it because some of you here's a k k if you buy their books is like tim's and he is robby jones and he is michael they have a very nice bio inside their books so you know don't take notes now you robby has a website you know you'll never get all that stuff down so just take that and i that they starting a new genre because for each of them the current book is very exciting and i read them and i love them but this is the second book on a related topic so this is a new genre like politics, religion, culture going wrong and this is a follow up book which is brand new and very interesting thing with, if you like, gossip. i'll stop stop tim alberta tim alberta is in here. here is tim alberta. his book is the kingdom the power and the glory and for those of you recognized where comes from, good for you. these are you know it's amazing they're all atlantic staff writers. so this session might be called the atlantic staff reunion or maybe they'll title it next year in that way. his first
is mckay coppins, robert jones and tim alberta to let i made their introductions i'm going to make it sure it because some of you here's a k k if you buy their books is like tim's and he is robby jones and he is michael they have a very nice bio inside their books so you know don't take notes now you robby has a website you know you'll never get all that stuff down so just take that and i that they starting a new genre because for each of them the current book is very exciting and i read them...
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Apr 14, 2024
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some of what robert has written about. i'll be interested, hear him sort of build on this. but a feeling that this country was becoming unrecognizable to them, that its judeo-christian heritage and values were under systematic attack, that and to be clear some of this rhetoric, some of this thinking is not new. this goes back several in fact, much of sort of modern evangelical as we know it today was sort of built this same persecution complex, jerry falwell senior and some of his allies in the 1970s onward. this idea that christiane was under assault in america. but i think that those have intensified and have scaled in a way that we may not fully appreciate. we are not in that world. just to give a brief example, to help sort of put some meat on the there, i think it's important to recognize how quickly some of this social cultural change has happened and to understand that historically do tend to see a backlash. there is that sort of condense that social cultural change. so, for example, when barack obama runs for president in 2008, he is opposed to same sex marriage. he
some of what robert has written about. i'll be interested, hear him sort of build on this. but a feeling that this country was becoming unrecognizable to them, that its judeo-christian heritage and values were under systematic attack, that and to be clear some of this rhetoric, some of this thinking is not new. this goes back several in fact, much of sort of modern evangelical as we know it today was sort of built this same persecution complex, jerry falwell senior and some of his allies in the...
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Apr 21, 2024
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the author robert kuttner. he's a award winning and bestselling author who covers the intersection of economics politics and social justice. you've seen his writings everywhere from the new york times, new york book review to the atlantic harper's new yorker, dissent, foreign affairs, columbia journalism review, political science quarterly, and, of course, the harvard business review. bob is co-founder and coeditor of the american prospect magazine, co-founder of the economic policy institute, which, believe me, a major, major player in the economics scene in washington. he currently serves on their board as a long time columnist for business week and the boston globe. he's academic post at boston university, harvard, among other institutions. he currently teaches at brandeis university. bob was also a staff writer and a columnist for the washington post. chief investigator for the senate banking committee. executive director of president carter's national commission on neighborhoods. and economics editor of th
the author robert kuttner. he's a award winning and bestselling author who covers the intersection of economics politics and social justice. you've seen his writings everywhere from the new york times, new york book review to the atlantic harper's new yorker, dissent, foreign affairs, columbia journalism review, political science quarterly, and, of course, the harvard business review. bob is co-founder and coeditor of the american prospect magazine, co-founder of the economic policy institute,...
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Apr 21, 2024
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and robert luke picked this guy through over a shoulder and ran to the helicopter. truman and jumped in. we didn't know that initially. when he jumped out, hit, knocked himself unconscious of that day robert luke gets a silver star. that's december the seventh. january i am promoted with more responsibility. become an aircraft commander to where i can participate as a commander of a ship to do combat assaults. down here at the bottom, you see a sitting on the ground on standby and when we got another mission during the day, the guns had combined call up the leadership. the leadership would throw smoke out. we'd all crank come, would go do the extra mission in january. i've been aircraft commander about three weeks and as an air firebase and so run this is all vietnamese with a couple american advisors and then they were awarded some medals for going in and picking these guys up. and we found out that day that the vietnamese, when we went to a place where they'd been overrun, we didn't get their wounded first like we do the americans. when you pick up a wounded ameri
and robert luke picked this guy through over a shoulder and ran to the helicopter. truman and jumped in. we didn't know that initially. when he jumped out, hit, knocked himself unconscious of that day robert luke gets a silver star. that's december the seventh. january i am promoted with more responsibility. become an aircraft commander to where i can participate as a commander of a ship to do combat assaults. down here at the bottom, you see a sitting on the ground on standby and when we got...
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Apr 1, 2024
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robert harris again, mr. jacobson i want to get something clear as this bypass was plan definite or proposed. but it's the state's recommendation based on a careful study of all the engineering facts and the social and economic data available to us. this meeting is being held. invite any new information and points of view concerning the effect of our recommendation. a record is being kept. your comments and will be thoroughly reviewed before. we can take any action then will consider what i say about the bypass. yes, they will. then still against it. yes, mr. aspen, did you wish to say something for use to answer? do i'm having rathburn, the fourth grade teacher at the new elementary school. i i came here today just to listen. i didn't expect to say anything, but after hearing some of the arguments against the new highway proposal, i would like to say just one thing. well, i'm just amazed at the number of people here who seem to be thinking about themselves. but isn't there a lot more to it than that? well, i
robert harris again, mr. jacobson i want to get something clear as this bypass was plan definite or proposed. but it's the state's recommendation based on a careful study of all the engineering facts and the social and economic data available to us. this meeting is being held. invite any new information and points of view concerning the effect of our recommendation. a record is being kept. your comments and will be thoroughly reviewed before. we can take any action then will consider what i say...
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Apr 7, 2024
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graham didn't know robert kennedy, but he knew teddy. teddy kennedy, the younger brother, and he was fond of the kennedy family and obviously understood that that's two kennedys who were killed in five years. john f in 63 was assassinated in dallas and then robert kennedy. then they failed in the california and the ambassador hotel and angeles in june of 68. but what i'm trying to show you here, these pages is the role that graham throughout that year. so graham sees johnson at the funeral at st pat's and johnson says after you're after we're done here, would you mind coming down to the white house to advise me to and to hold some kind of a, a service the staff who are really affected by this as as americans were. and so graham says, of course so the graham diary talks about i came down washington right afterwards from new york. he says in his diary, something like it, one of the most depressing flights i've ever taken, because it was full of robert kennedy's former staffers. i got to the white house, i checked my usual room at the white
graham didn't know robert kennedy, but he knew teddy. teddy kennedy, the younger brother, and he was fond of the kennedy family and obviously understood that that's two kennedys who were killed in five years. john f in 63 was assassinated in dallas and then robert kennedy. then they failed in the california and the ambassador hotel and angeles in june of 68. but what i'm trying to show you here, these pages is the role that graham throughout that year. so graham sees johnson at the funeral at...
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Apr 24, 2024
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kim crenshaw will be in dialog tonight with dorothy roberts. roberts is the 14th pen integrates knowledge professor the george h. university professor of law, sociology and the raymond and d. tanner moselle alexander, professor of civil at university of pennsylvania. she is also the founding director of the penn program on race science and society and intersect and internationally scholar, activist and social critic. she has written and lectured extensively on the interplay of gender race and class in legal concerning reproduction, bioethics and child welfare. her latest book, which i can't recommend highly enough torn apart, is about how the child welfare system destroys black families and how abolition can build a safer world. roberts is also the author of the classic killing the body, race, reproduction and the meaning of liberty, among other books, and has published more than 100 journals in essays and books and scholarly journals. welcome to the stage dorothy roberts. the beautiful. thanks so much for coming. and thank you for that warm we
kim crenshaw will be in dialog tonight with dorothy roberts. roberts is the 14th pen integrates knowledge professor the george h. university professor of law, sociology and the raymond and d. tanner moselle alexander, professor of civil at university of pennsylvania. she is also the founding director of the penn program on race science and society and intersect and internationally scholar, activist and social critic. she has written and lectured extensively on the interplay of gender race and...