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Apr 28, 2024
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when anthony burns was carried off by federal forces with the tyrannical methods of despots. and so consequently the republican party pledged, at a minimum to prevent the further expansion of slavery. and since in the wake of the dred scott decision, this position was now contrary, it seemed, to the constitution as interpreted by the supreme court. you could fairly call it a radical position. and yet republicans repeatedly and emphatically emphasized that they were the true conservatives, theirs was the only true conservatism, wrote one party member in 1859, because it proposes to restore the administration of public affairs to the principles and policy established by the founders of our political system. so clearly this was a language of the language of preservation was a source of legitimation. you know, if you're being accused, as republicans were after the dred scott decision by their political opponents of being dangerous radicals for taking on the supreme court, refusing to acknowledge the legitimacy of a supreme court decision, they naturally responded by saying not in
when anthony burns was carried off by federal forces with the tyrannical methods of despots. and so consequently the republican party pledged, at a minimum to prevent the further expansion of slavery. and since in the wake of the dred scott decision, this position was now contrary, it seemed, to the constitution as interpreted by the supreme court. you could fairly call it a radical position. and yet republicans repeatedly and emphatically emphasized that they were the true conservatives,...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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my name is anthony arnove. i'm the editorial director of haymarket books. and we have the great privilege be the publishers of say her name, which is the focus of this program. our program features kimberlÉ crenshaw with dorothy roberts members of the say name mothers network and. in addition to the author talk, we'll have special performances evening from rosalyn coleman abbey, dobson, margaret odette and kim, and then also a book signing after organize by the brilliant independ bookseller here in philadelphia uncle bobby. so please thank uncle bobby's and and the free library of philadelphia hosting this event. we're so grateful. be here, kimberle crenshaw charles, the co-founder and executive director of the african american policy forum and the founder and executive director of the center for intersectionality social policy studies at columbia law school. she is the promise institute professor at ucla law school and the isidore in civil cells. baker professor at columbia law school. she's popularly known her development of intersectionality, critical r
my name is anthony arnove. i'm the editorial director of haymarket books. and we have the great privilege be the publishers of say her name, which is the focus of this program. our program features kimberlÉ crenshaw with dorothy roberts members of the say name mothers network and. in addition to the author talk, we'll have special performances evening from rosalyn coleman abbey, dobson, margaret odette and kim, and then also a book signing after organize by the brilliant independ bookseller...
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Apr 25, 2024
04/24
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so when i published robert f kennedy's book, the real anthony fauci, you know, it was the bestselling book in america. in its first week, it sold 93,000 copies. the new york times bestseller list made it number seven. they wouldn't accept an ad for it. big tech platforms wouldn't take ads for it. so it was censored in every possible way. it got no reviews at all. total media blackout because it was labeled as misinformation, which by the definition that was prevalent then, which was anything that contradict did statements by dr. fauci were pese misinformation. he represented science. and that was that was where where, you know, the government position had had gotten to. so a book that contradicted him even just by the title. so you didn't have to read any of it to decide that. and the title itself was misinformation because it said that a government official might be saying things that were untrue or incomplete or needed further research. tony lyons, is it fair to say that you published conservative books? i know you just bought regnery and another conservative publisher as well. yeah
so when i published robert f kennedy's book, the real anthony fauci, you know, it was the bestselling book in america. in its first week, it sold 93,000 copies. the new york times bestseller list made it number seven. they wouldn't accept an ad for it. big tech platforms wouldn't take ads for it. so it was censored in every possible way. it got no reviews at all. total media blackout because it was labeled as misinformation, which by the definition that was prevalent then, which was anything...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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and edith wharton obviously has a great backlist of classic writers, but also modern classics by by anthony dore. although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then there's gallery, which is really the home for pop culture. they had the biggest nonfiction and memoir of of the fall. last year it was the it was britney spears. so, you know, simon schuster is sort of a home for topical nonfiction, political books, history, serious, serious topics that people are discussing. so there's there's there's a little bit of everything for everybody since you joined random house in 1989, by the way, when you were at brown university, did you want to be in publishing? was that your plan? i did not have a plan. i will say that i was interested in journalism. i was interested in wr
and edith wharton obviously has a great backlist of classic writers, but also modern classics by by anthony dore. although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then...
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Apr 6, 2024
04/24
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and edith wharton obviously has a great backlist of classic writers, but also modern classics by by anthony dore. although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then there's gallery, which is really the home for pop culture. they had the biggest nonfiction and memoir of of the fall. last year it was the it was britney spears. so, you know, simon schuster is sort of a home for topical nonfiction, political books, history, serious, serious topics that people are discussing. so there's there's there's a little bit of everything for everybody since you joined random house in 1989, by the way, when you were at brown university, did you want to be in publishing? was that your plan? i did not have a plan. i will say that i was interested in journalism. i was interested in wr
and edith wharton obviously has a great backlist of classic writers, but also modern classics by by anthony dore. although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then...
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Apr 21, 2024
04/24
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anthony aims to lead the conversation here today on his new book, the search for reagan the appealing intellectual conservatism of ronald reagan. and his. thanks group. thank you. thank all right. well, this is good fun. yes. and before i even get started on my questions, you all heard my boss. just give me a task. you you met ronald reagan in 1978. we have to hear about that. have to learn more about your first interaction with reagan. so i guess sure. i was a 21 year old snot nose kid. i was press secretary for a us senate candidate in new hampshire. but then gordon humphrey and i was the actually sixth campaign manager or the sixth president was hired by the campaign. but i lasted actually a year and a half with him. but in october, the reagan came up to new hampshire to campaign for the then governor, mel thompson, and for cut commercials for gordon. for gordon humphrey, who was then by that time was a republican. so he came there was in concord, there was an old, wonderful old hotel called the new hampshire highway hotel. and it was always the same seat of political activity. it
anthony aims to lead the conversation here today on his new book, the search for reagan the appealing intellectual conservatism of ronald reagan. and his. thanks group. thank you. thank all right. well, this is good fun. yes. and before i even get started on my questions, you all heard my boss. just give me a task. you you met ronald reagan in 1978. we have to hear about that. have to learn more about your first interaction with reagan. so i guess sure. i was a 21 year old snot nose kid. i was...
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Apr 14, 2024
04/24
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think about like what would have had the suffragists movement really been integrated like if susan d anthony had not been so horrible to the suffragettes. you know that. what direction that would have had in terms of power. now, i think that that would have been frightening but you know we were spurned and so the rights you start seeing the the fissures that continue even until the fissures deep. let me give you a quick fact correction just a just an addition additional point. the schism starts between black and white women with the passage of the 15th amendment, because stanton and anthony were vehemently rabid racist in their response to that, they wanted white women included not just black men, and they wanted black women included. they wanted universal suffrage for which there were seven votes in the congress among radical opponents. but kat has by 1915. kath created a bi multiethnic, class wide coalition. she's working with mary church. terrell she's working with the national association of colored women and the acp, the last killing amendment on the suffrage was for it to be white only
think about like what would have had the suffragists movement really been integrated like if susan d anthony had not been so horrible to the suffragettes. you know that. what direction that would have had in terms of power. now, i think that that would have been frightening but you know we were spurned and so the rights you start seeing the the fissures that continue even until the fissures deep. let me give you a quick fact correction just a just an addition additional point. the schism starts...
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Apr 3, 2024
04/24
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well you mentioned anthony mendez and he's he's passed his wife is the widow is still alive i believe jonna mendez. but they've written books about their work with the cia. what was his role, tony mendez was the chief disguise here at cia, and he was also part of the exfil transition team. we have a painting here that shows him and his partner. his partner still undercover to this day. so you don't know about his partner. that's also a bit of something here at cia. it's very different. it's you might learn about one part of the story, but there's a whole part of the story that might take years or even decades before you find out the whole story. and one day, perhaps this partner will tell his side of the story and you'll learn even more about the of argo is tony mendez is work on display here in the museum. if you look through the artifacts of argo you can see what tony did. in fact, he did the artwork for, the variety ad. he was a graphics artist. he after he retired became a painter. so it's great to have his. tradecraft on display here at cia. so back to the argo operation and tehr
well you mentioned anthony mendez and he's he's passed his wife is the widow is still alive i believe jonna mendez. but they've written books about their work with the cia. what was his role, tony mendez was the chief disguise here at cia, and he was also part of the exfil transition team. we have a painting here that shows him and his partner. his partner still undercover to this day. so you don't know about his partner. that's also a bit of something here at cia. it's very different. it's you...
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Apr 27, 2024
04/24
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conscious of time and we have stack of questions from folks in the audience the first one here is from ken anthony, who asks how can tech better support the journey humans to be more human not, increasingly tied to the latest tech tool. let's make the tech. let's make the internet a social internet. make it socially aware. make it give us control. ownership of us. you know reclaim our personhood take it back from the machines of big and then build from. kimberly wright asks how at all has heritage affected your and your position on tech? well, i think i just was alluding to that. i mean, we all come from someplace with that perspective and i refer to my my my mother's dining room table and yeah, i'm blessed because come from a family of inherited image of of building and problem solving and you know, this is at end of the day, a infrastructure or engineering problem. and we can fix that. as i said earlier at the the bigger challenge, i think, is going to be the how do we create momentum around, you know, adopting an alternative to the current internet and really people understand how they fit in k
conscious of time and we have stack of questions from folks in the audience the first one here is from ken anthony, who asks how can tech better support the journey humans to be more human not, increasingly tied to the latest tech tool. let's make the tech. let's make the internet a social internet. make it socially aware. make it give us control. ownership of us. you know reclaim our personhood take it back from the machines of big and then build from. kimberly wright asks how at all has...
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Apr 26, 2024
04/24
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joy anthony. okay. the time is 250. we're going to do 10 minutes of q&a. please feel free to see the roving mikes with trevor and sonya and. yeah, let's take it away. yeah, take it. hello. i, first of all, congratulation on the book and thank you for being here in new york. do you mind standing up? you're okay with that? yeah, okay. i again, thank you for here. since we're in new york, i to ask if you had any thoughts on the action plan that the city just out the city has asked for participation stakeholders for like understanding the city should be regulating and using air. so i thought, you know, given backdrop of that, which was maybe two or three weeks ago and then the executive order yesterday, i thought maybe i'd love to hear what you think about what city level government should be doing in of using air responsibly or should we just be advocating that people should just not use it for government at all. oh, that's a great question and something i've thought about quite a bit within the space of facial recognition technologies, we've seen ordinances
joy anthony. okay. the time is 250. we're going to do 10 minutes of q&a. please feel free to see the roving mikes with trevor and sonya and. yeah, let's take it away. yeah, take it. hello. i, first of all, congratulation on the book and thank you for being here in new york. do you mind standing up? you're okay with that? yeah, okay. i again, thank you for here. since we're in new york, i to ask if you had any thoughts on the action plan that the city just out the city has asked for...
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Apr 4, 2024
04/24
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place, we would all know her name the same way that we know people like elizabeth stanton and susan b anthony. when elizabeth was six years old, her married her off to a man in his thirties named sieber smith. and i am convinced that at the beginning of their relationship it was a happy marriage. but over time it deteriorated. he was not very successful in the different he took in life and she ended up being much of the financial support their family. and by the end of her life she looked back on their marriage with. great bitterness and disdain and complained. in the 1880s that when she married him, she was 16 and he was about 33 when she married him. he was old and very bald. now, first, i have to say i don't see anything wrong with that. and i know about a quarter of you in the room can sympathize with me, but even more so, this photograph taken more than 30 years later and i would kill for a head of hair like that. well, stephen smith, a prominent journalist by his own right in the 1830s, and he created a fictional character that some of you probably familiar with. it's a guy named jack d
place, we would all know her name the same way that we know people like elizabeth stanton and susan b anthony. when elizabeth was six years old, her married her off to a man in his thirties named sieber smith. and i am convinced that at the beginning of their relationship it was a happy marriage. but over time it deteriorated. he was not very successful in the different he took in life and she ended up being much of the financial support their family. and by the end of her life she looked back...
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Apr 22, 2024
04/24
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agatha is five anthonys and the coveted mary clark award. she's also on air investigative reporter for boston's whdh tv and has won 37 emmys, 14 edward r murrow awards and dozens of other honors for her groundbreaking. lee mcintyre is presenting his new book on this information how to fight for truth and protect democracy. the effort to destroy facts and make ungovernable didn't come of nowhere. it is the culmination of seven years of strategic denialism in on disinformation. lemack entire shows how the war on facts began and how ordinary citizens can fight back against the scourge of disinformation that is now threatening the very fabric of our. in the words of michael shermer, quote lee mcintyre has emerged as our foremost scholar of science denier and an intellectual activists combatting the attempted assassination truth in the teeth of fake alternative facts, conspiracy, identity politics, postmodern ism and epistemological relativism. lee mcintyre is on this expertly identifies who the enemies of truth are and how to counter claims with
agatha is five anthonys and the coveted mary clark award. she's also on air investigative reporter for boston's whdh tv and has won 37 emmys, 14 edward r murrow awards and dozens of other honors for her groundbreaking. lee mcintyre is presenting his new book on this information how to fight for truth and protect democracy. the effort to destroy facts and make ungovernable didn't come of nowhere. it is the culmination of seven years of strategic denialism in on disinformation. lemack entire...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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my name is anthony arnove. i'm the editorial director of haymarket books. and we have the great privilege be the publishers of say her name, which is the focus of this program. our program features kimberlÉ crenshaw with dorothy roberts members of the say name mothers network and. in addition to the author talk, we'll have special performances evening from rosalyn coleman abbey, dobson, margaret odette and kim, and then also a book signing after organize by the brilliant independ bookseller here in philadelphia uncle bobby. so please thank uncle bobby's and and the free library of philadelphia hosting this event. we're so grateful. be here, kimberle crenshaw charles, the co-founder and executive director of the african american policy forum and the founder and executive director of the center for intersectionality social policy studies at columbia law school. she is the promise institute professor at ucla law school and the isidore in civil cells. baker professor at columbia law school. she's popularly known her development of intersectionality, critical r
my name is anthony arnove. i'm the editorial director of haymarket books. and we have the great privilege be the publishers of say her name, which is the focus of this program. our program features kimberlÉ crenshaw with dorothy roberts members of the say name mothers network and. in addition to the author talk, we'll have special performances evening from rosalyn coleman abbey, dobson, margaret odette and kim, and then also a book signing after organize by the brilliant independ bookseller...
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Apr 27, 2024
04/24
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anthony stevens ball and always does a great cover us he's great he gives an into annotated there's like 20 footnotes to the cover. this symbolizes that and that's what this means. that's what's going on here. and this you know and andy and steve masika, who are steve mays also that they write they wrote a really great description of some of the symbolism of that cover. but but what it's what it hints around the symbolism of the cover it's ending the slats and censorship of corporate and it's also reporting it also gives us the opportunity to think about the lack new accurate news sources that people end up getting to see. right. so slats or blinds the window actually act as as filters. right. and what gets what gets and what doesn't get through the filters. and so we ask, quite honestly, what would happen if journalism disappeared? i mean, because we've been looking at this and we've been looking at the journalistic landscape for for a very long time. and it sounds preposterous on, the face of it, what you kind of just blurted out when we were having a conversation one day and just kind
anthony stevens ball and always does a great cover us he's great he gives an into annotated there's like 20 footnotes to the cover. this symbolizes that and that's what this means. that's what's going on here. and this you know and andy and steve masika, who are steve mays also that they write they wrote a really great description of some of the symbolism of that cover. but but what it's what it hints around the symbolism of the cover it's ending the slats and censorship of corporate and it's...
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Apr 16, 2024
04/24
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the committee meets today to receive testimony from general anthony cotton, commander of u.s. strategic command or stratcom. and generals steven whiting, commander of u.s. spacecom or spacecom. gentlemen, thank you for your service to the nation and extend our thanks to the men and women who serve with you. as in the past we have asked the commanders the stratcom and spacecom to testify together. until 2019. spacecom was a part of strategic command. mr. reed: as spacecom continues as an independent command, it's important to identify any gaps or seams that emerged during the transition. on the global stage, russia continues to behave recklessly. recent press reports state that russia is considering violating international space treaties and endangering the global use of space for vital communications and sensing. further, putin has stab staged the strategy stability and arms control policies both our nations have respected for decades. over the past year, russia has suspended its participation in the star treaty and the comprehensive test ban treaty. russia continues to develo
the committee meets today to receive testimony from general anthony cotton, commander of u.s. strategic command or stratcom. and generals steven whiting, commander of u.s. spacecom or spacecom. gentlemen, thank you for your service to the nation and extend our thanks to the men and women who serve with you. as in the past we have asked the commanders the stratcom and spacecom to testify together. until 2019. spacecom was a part of strategic command. mr. reed: as spacecom continues as an...