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Mar 30, 2024
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oklahoma is about this. yes. yeah thank you. the question was about how much students in oklahoma learn about the race massacre. to your point, i talk to people all ages from greenwood white, black or far from tulsa, white and black. and so many of them have told me that they never learned about this in school, let alone any of us who grew up outside of oklahoma. there's been, i think, some technical things done to make that more prevalent. so for example, teaching about the race massacre as part of the oklahoma state standards. now, however. so it varies from teacher to teacher. and also now the state superintendent named ryan walters, who is very kind of on a crusade against critical race theory. at one point a while ago, he was questioned about tulsa massacre and had a quote along the lines of, well, it wasn't really about race. and so it's kind of a situation where though technically the state is required to teach students, there's a lot of pressure, teachers feel, to not teach the history. and i can also say, actually, that
oklahoma is about this. yes. yeah thank you. the question was about how much students in oklahoma learn about the race massacre. to your point, i talk to people all ages from greenwood white, black or far from tulsa, white and black. and so many of them have told me that they never learned about this in school, let alone any of us who grew up outside of oklahoma. there's been, i think, some technical things done to make that more prevalent. so for example, teaching about the race massacre as...
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Mar 27, 2024
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and so to give a few examples of those in skinner versus oklahoma in 1942 at the supreme court strikes down an oklahoma law that called for the compulsory sterilizing zation of people who had been convicted of three or more crimes of moral turpitude and the crimes of moral turpitude was interpreted very broadly to include, you know, everyday crimes, burglary and robbery. it strikes down this compulsory sterilization law. and as the court was considering the case as it made its way to the court very much part of context was the awareness that hitler and the nazis had engaged and a massive program, compulsory sterilization in the interest of racial purity and racial supremacy. and, you know, example, the prisoners in oklahoma who were facing forced sterilization action were attacking the law and saying it represented to the hitler possession of american law. and it very much is part of the context. and in the opinion striking it down, douglas says that in evil or reckless hands, compulsory sterilization can be used to eliminate entire categories of people. and everybody knew. exactly who
and so to give a few examples of those in skinner versus oklahoma in 1942 at the supreme court strikes down an oklahoma law that called for the compulsory sterilizing zation of people who had been convicted of three or more crimes of moral turpitude and the crimes of moral turpitude was interpreted very broadly to include, you know, everyday crimes, burglary and robbery. it strikes down this compulsory sterilization law. and as the court was considering the case as it made its way to the court...
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Mar 14, 2024
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you may not know this, but occasionally, oklahoma has severe weather. occasionally, when you have severe weather, that has become a long-term issue for us as well. a lot of vertical infrastructure continues to do with how they can manage those issues. we also have fires the breakout. it happens at times the derelict power grid. that is an issue that still got to resolve and will hopefully be part of our conversation today. as well as occasionally a lightning strike, whatever it may be. maybe just something the cast will be aggressive wire. among our witnesses today, it comes from the federal bureaucracy should not. we do have some general contracting issues, so for instance, in oklahoma, the welfare assistance begins on march 1st. did i mention that i wildfires came in on the end of february this year ? suggest giving federal assist us to be able to come in for our wildfires that happen the commitment for the contract dates said created additional problems for us. we bless the red tape that we have to work through. we should be able to bond to those. on
you may not know this, but occasionally, oklahoma has severe weather. occasionally, when you have severe weather, that has become a long-term issue for us as well. a lot of vertical infrastructure continues to do with how they can manage those issues. we also have fires the breakout. it happens at times the derelict power grid. that is an issue that still got to resolve and will hopefully be part of our conversation today. as well as occasionally a lightning strike, whatever it may be. maybe...
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Mar 1, 2024
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so when it says there's good reason to think of oklahoma as being part of an extended south that that's that's one big reason why that would be the case and the others thinking back on and with one observation we tend to think about violent dispossession of native americans, especially in the west and all of the tradition of western movies in the violence that it depicts of. u.s. calvary men versus indians. but it's worth remembering the bloodiest war against american was fought in florida. the wars which go there, three of them. and so the violent occupation of florida is very much part of the story of the emergence, what we now call the modern south. and through this whole book, i think one of the themes that you all talk about in your work and, all the other authors talk about in their work is this idea of explore kind of the concept of who gets to be considered southern in case, so whose history is going to included in this book is very different than whose history would have been included in a book like this 50 years ago. and i'd love to hear from all of you about that process and
so when it says there's good reason to think of oklahoma as being part of an extended south that that's that's one big reason why that would be the case and the others thinking back on and with one observation we tend to think about violent dispossession of native americans, especially in the west and all of the tradition of western movies in the violence that it depicts of. u.s. calvary men versus indians. but it's worth remembering the bloodiest war against american was fought in florida. the...
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Mar 30, 2024
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and in it's either kansas or oklahoma right on the border. there were non profit groups have large areas. they are similar tenuously. you know restoring buffalo, their bison there but also native plants are also in montana the kit fox is coming back they had a i think they had a bear there, a grizzly there, which grizzly on the plains is a big thing. so those things, you know obviously they took millennia for it to become what it became it didn't take that long to undo it it'll take some time and a lot of effort but the the way that they graze and everything on the places doing it they see remarkable rejuvenation of the prairie system. and just picking up on your final comments, what parallels do you see between the story of the buffalo and debates we're having today or energy policy? you know, was a need we learn from that history? well, you know, in the i guess i'm trying to think about in terms of the debate there really wasn't that of a debate. you know, while this was going on, the slaughter, the united states government didn't necessari
and in it's either kansas or oklahoma right on the border. there were non profit groups have large areas. they are similar tenuously. you know restoring buffalo, their bison there but also native plants are also in montana the kit fox is coming back they had a i think they had a bear there, a grizzly there, which grizzly on the plains is a big thing. so those things, you know obviously they took millennia for it to become what it became it didn't take that long to undo it it'll take some time...
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Mar 5, 2024
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i recently spoke to the oklahoma floodplain managers association, at the annual conference in tulsa and i saw firsthand how the city had transformed its approach to flooding. the conference host helped tulsa achieve their status and nfip policyholders now enjoy a 45% discount off of flood premiums. apparently i was not the only one to notice the compliments. oklahoma's governor recently appointed the speaker to serve as the state's top emergency management official. in addition to fema grant programs that incentivize resilience investments, states have been launching their own innovative programs. the secretary of the maryland department of works and minutes meant, recently elected to be the president of the national emergency management association is quoted as hazard mitigation is the center of the universe. to that end, south carolina recently announced $200 million for flood resilience projects. while florida, south carolina, alabama and louisiana and others have programs aimed at incentivizing homeowners to strengthen their homes against hurricane risk. a recent academic study foun
i recently spoke to the oklahoma floodplain managers association, at the annual conference in tulsa and i saw firsthand how the city had transformed its approach to flooding. the conference host helped tulsa achieve their status and nfip policyholders now enjoy a 45% discount off of flood premiums. apparently i was not the only one to notice the compliments. oklahoma's governor recently appointed the speaker to serve as the state's top emergency management official. in addition to fema grant...
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Mar 4, 2024
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just it's been incredible. 35,000 people in alabama, 20,000 people twice in oklahoma. we just left new hampshire. we were packed. every single venue. we had numbers that nobody else has ever had ever had ever had. and we're going to keep it going. but very important is tomorrow. you know, it all doesn't mean anything. if we say, oh, let's stay home, who knows what the numbers are? the polls are very nice, but who knows? we can't take a chance right, because we're going to make america great again. but we can't do that. we can't do that. if you don't get out there tomorrow. all right. and the more we can do it and the more we can win by the bigger the mandate, the better it is and the easier job we're going to have. all right. so i want to thank you. i want to thank you. so. this all began on june 16th. and who knew this was going to happen? i figured maybe i'd be in the pack. and, you know, sort of, hey, i've won a lot over my life. i even win a lot of club championships. that's good, right? but i'm not going to be playing much golf. believe me, if i win this, i'm not
just it's been incredible. 35,000 people in alabama, 20,000 people twice in oklahoma. we just left new hampshire. we were packed. every single venue. we had numbers that nobody else has ever had ever had ever had. and we're going to keep it going. but very important is tomorrow. you know, it all doesn't mean anything. if we say, oh, let's stay home, who knows what the numbers are? the polls are very nice, but who knows? we can't take a chance right, because we're going to make america great...
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Mar 4, 2024
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and but the cherokees reestablish a paper in tahlequah, oklahoma and it's the successor and this is its motto our rights are country. so you can see some in 1844. we're in a new place now, but we want our we want our country built. the land itself. one of the ways i found they talked about land was agricole and the indian territory. so here's three nd of booster quotes from 1847 when the the advote is saying we have fruitful and it should be toil and we have got it's there's a recognition there is a cherokee. you know land that's well borders in indian terriry this time and and they're recognizing that although there's no there' no threat to t land at this time. and and so you don't hear a manifest destiny or any of that discussion this early here. you know, we can know the command rights polls and, you know, do these do these things increase the land? inrestingly, it it says cherokee farrs, but there are white farmers in the territory and i mentioned. here it's a switch papers that was a cherokee paper. tahlequahere's a short little the choctaw telegraph which does something quite diff
and but the cherokees reestablish a paper in tahlequah, oklahoma and it's the successor and this is its motto our rights are country. so you can see some in 1844. we're in a new place now, but we want our we want our country built. the land itself. one of the ways i found they talked about land was agricole and the indian territory. so here's three nd of booster quotes from 1847 when the the advote is saying we have fruitful and it should be toil and we have got it's there's a recognition there...
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Mar 17, 2024
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miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when
miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when
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Mar 25, 2024
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that this one southerner bid that he deliver all the mail in oklahoma for 1/100 of a penny just so he wouldn't have to fight. he clearly wasn't going to deliver the mail either, but. was soldiers mail during this war is censored and if so, was it done by the army or by the postal carriers that i love that question because it lets me say that the civil war this magical point in our history where we a literate population who were anxious to communicate with each other and we had at least some the union side except certain exemptions and no censorship and so that's why we can read other people's mail and i do just it's is a glorious it's a glorious time to do studies and that's why there is so much i think written about the civil war once once you got past the civil war and even as you were getting, let's say, the war, which didn't even last year, not much changed then there wasn't that much mail going to cuba or the philippines, but once you got into world war one, you began to have censorship and by world war two, it was a pretty fleshed a fleshed out routine. and it was done by the by
that this one southerner bid that he deliver all the mail in oklahoma for 1/100 of a penny just so he wouldn't have to fight. he clearly wasn't going to deliver the mail either, but. was soldiers mail during this war is censored and if so, was it done by the army or by the postal carriers that i love that question because it lets me say that the civil war this magical point in our history where we a literate population who were anxious to communicate with each other and we had at least some the...
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Mar 9, 2024
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george w but it's not exactly heavy duty left in to defend great state of texas from the state of oklahoma in the well not if you ask texans they're very wary those folks. yes so this is the four year carter period. then you came back with president reagan. yes, i do. i did. and it was and part. jim beam. jim baker had been a mentor of mine a long time and he was partly responsible for rounding up a group of people to be on staff. and i think reagan understood better than anybody else how important it is to be before you got there and and what had happened to two or three other presidents just before that was the president got elected and he would bring with him the who had been with him when he would back home in the state, but he wouldn't bring any new people. and it was you know, it was a very closed little circle and it didn't work. you know as as a way of governing. and so that was an issue. and reagan understood that, convinced him of that. and a lot of time went into preparing the white house staff and baker really did that. we had two groups of people we had we that were the califo
george w but it's not exactly heavy duty left in to defend great state of texas from the state of oklahoma in the well not if you ask texans they're very wary those folks. yes so this is the four year carter period. then you came back with president reagan. yes, i do. i did. and it was and part. jim beam. jim baker had been a mentor of mine a long time and he was partly responsible for rounding up a group of people to be on staff. and i think reagan understood better than anybody else how...
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Mar 18, 2024
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miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when we about the american presidency, we think people like lincoln and tr and fdr and we think about the 20th century as being the defining century and defining and determining the presidential power. but stephen rockwell in this provocative new book turns out all that on its head. his book is called the presidency and the american state leadership and decision in the adams grant and taft administrations. the book is published by the center studies on the presidency with the university of virginia press. so here to these topics are, first of all, the author of the book, steven rockwell. steven is a of political science at saint university in new york. he earlier worked as a senior research analyst at the brookings institution and as an assistant professor in the political science and public administration programs at the university. michigan at flint. steven is the author of indian and the administrative state in 19th century, which was published in 2010. how government
miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when we about the american presidency, we think people like lincoln and tr and fdr and we think about the 20th century as being the defining century and defining and determining the presidential power. but stephen rockwell in this provocative new book turns out all that on its head. his book is called the presidency and the american state leadership and decision in the...
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Mar 25, 2024
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miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when we about the american presidency, we think people like lincoln and tr and fdr and we think about the 20th century as being the defining century and defining and determining the presidential power. but stephen rockwell in this provocative new book turns out all that on its head. his book is called the presidency and the american state leadership and decision in the adams grant and taft administrations. the book is published by the center studies on the presidency with the university of virginia press. so here to these topics are, first of all, the author of the book, steven rockwell. steven is a of political science at saint university in new york. he earlier worked as a senior research analyst at the brookings institution and as an assistant professor in the political science and public administration programs at the university. michigan at flint. steven is the author of indian and the administrative state in 19th century, which was published in 2010. how government
miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when we about the american presidency, we think people like lincoln and tr and fdr and we think about the 20th century as being the defining century and defining and determining the presidential power. but stephen rockwell in this provocative new book turns out all that on its head. his book is called the presidency and the american state leadership and decision in the...
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Mar 22, 2024
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also i noticed that oklahoma, a very strong conservative, pollworker protection was just signed into law. don't harass those people. what they're doing is pure, you know, good citizenship. getting back to the communities. mo: let's talk about access. there are those, a lot of folks on the left, my party, who, um, have very serious concerns about attempts to limit access. as they would see it. so i'd love just, again, starting with a general question, your thoughts on how accessible the vote is, and then, you know, maybe your thoughts on some of the concerns that people have raised about voter i.d. laws. about limiting the early vote in some states. i know you can only speak for yours. but in some states you do see a shrinking of the period for the early vote. or limiting the number of early vote sites. and thousand hu that feeds into mistrust of elections on the left. i'd love your thoughts on all of that. brad: well, what we've done is, in georgia we said we're going to give you three options. no excuse absentee voting. voting early. voting on election day. you decide. and you decid
also i noticed that oklahoma, a very strong conservative, pollworker protection was just signed into law. don't harass those people. what they're doing is pure, you know, good citizenship. getting back to the communities. mo: let's talk about access. there are those, a lot of folks on the left, my party, who, um, have very serious concerns about attempts to limit access. as they would see it. so i'd love just, again, starting with a general question, your thoughts on how accessible the vote is,...
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Mar 26, 2024
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miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when we about the american presidency, we
miller center, the scholar in residence at the history channel and a of history at the university of oklahoma. many of us, when we about the american presidency, we
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Mar 5, 2024
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we are filling every seat at our air traffic controller academy in oklahoma city. we are expanding the use of advanced training and facilities across the country including upgrading simulators and 95 towers. just this last week we installed the first tower at austin airport in texas. we are working with aeronautical colleges to move graduates quickly to on-the-job training. we have initiate year-round hiring for experience controllers from the military or from private industry. during my first three months it is administered and met with controllers in boston, philadelphia, dallas, here at d.c. and the tower. in those conversations controller fatigue came up repeatedly as a top concern. because in large part by shifting schedules challenging overtime requirements. increasing our control will help mitigate risks associated with controller fatigue. additionally we have set up a panel of fatigue experts to review the latest science on sleep needs and how that can be applied to work requirements and scheduling. expect to receive the panel's report later this spring. th
we are filling every seat at our air traffic controller academy in oklahoma city. we are expanding the use of advanced training and facilities across the country including upgrading simulators and 95 towers. just this last week we installed the first tower at austin airport in texas. we are working with aeronautical colleges to move graduates quickly to on-the-job training. we have initiate year-round hiring for experience controllers from the military or from private industry. during my first...
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Mar 6, 2024
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. >> the gentleman from oklahoma, mr. lucas is recognized for five minutes. >> thank you for testifying today. i cautioned against raising capital requirements to keep prices of food and power stable for tumors. at the time, you said that was a very specific concern and you weren't sure the proposal would even address this. and in fairness, that was before the proposal was officially published. unfortunately, we now know that the proposal does impact commodity. and in fact, they are among the most penalized financial product. i very much appreciate your comments and responses to chairman mchenry about the nature of the overall proposal. congress wanted end-users to be able to secure their hedges without posting margin. it keeps derivative markets affordable. but some of these types of transactions, users will face 10 times the capital work wire meant. chairman powell, make me feel a little better. ease my concerns here. will the fed work to fix this? >> let me start by saying i want to echo the fact that our commodity mar
. >> the gentleman from oklahoma, mr. lucas is recognized for five minutes. >> thank you for testifying today. i cautioned against raising capital requirements to keep prices of food and power stable for tumors. at the time, you said that was a very specific concern and you weren't sure the proposal would even address this. and in fairness, that was before the proposal was officially published. unfortunately, we now know that the proposal does impact commodity. and in fact, they are...
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Mar 28, 2024
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a central line goes to san francisco from saint louis, one north of oklahoma to los angeles and the southernmost survey went across texas here to san diego and followed an old stagecoach trail. and a fifth survey went up and down the coast. california jefferson davis is going to send these expedition out. he's going to pay them very well and he's going to ask them to collect all this knowledge about which route will be the best. this is the 1850s. slavery is a live issue. it should come as no surprise to us that jefferson thinks that the best route for the pacific road is the one that goes through texas, because that's the one that has the most direct benefit to slaveholders. right. it's go back. it's that route in right there. so when davis makes his report, congress, he's like, they're all great. but i would suggest we build this railroad because it's the most expedient if we ever need to get troops to california because being invaded and congress is like, hmm, seems unlikely and because the country cannot agree on which railroad is the greatest national benefit, because is such a divisive iss
a central line goes to san francisco from saint louis, one north of oklahoma to los angeles and the southernmost survey went across texas here to san diego and followed an old stagecoach trail. and a fifth survey went up and down the coast. california jefferson davis is going to send these expedition out. he's going to pay them very well and he's going to ask them to collect all this knowledge about which route will be the best. this is the 1850s. slavery is a live issue. it should come as no...