Center for the humanities. Event occurred in dallas. Since the pandemic has begun, for our purposes, since we shut down in march, they thing that thing that has been driving our analysis here as historians is what is the historical precedent . Obviously, 1918 is the one that comes to mind and we have nobody better to tell us about 1918 than my friend christopher nichols. Hes an associate professor of history at oregon state. He is also the director of the Oregon State Center for humanities and the founder of their citizenship and crisis initiative. He also studied at harvard and wesleyan, and got his ma and phd from a good friend of ours at the university of virginia. Chris is an expert on i would say the early parts of the 20th century. That is what his previous work was on. He is expanding out and he and i, before we came on, we were chatting about new work on ideologies in u. S. Foreign policy, which is that book itself was a seminal book in the field in 1987 and im glad someone has
The 1918 flu pandemic altered American Life in ways that are familiar to those living through the 2020 coronavirus pandemic. Conflicting information left people wary and fearful. College classes were held outside, sports were canceled, asks or challenged as unamerican, and fines imposed on those who refuse to wear them. Next, Christopher Mcknight nichols recounts how the country experienced the events of a century ago and the lessons we might learn. He directs the Oregon University center for humanities. Since the pandemic has begun, for our purposes, since we shut down in march, they thing that has been driving our analysis here as historians is what is the historical precedent . Obviously, 1918 is the one that comes to mind and we have nobody better to tell us about 1918 that my friend christopher nichols. Hes an associate professor of history at oregon state. Hes the director of the Oregon State Center for humanities and the founder of their citizenship and crisis initiative. He als
The 1918 flu pandemic altered American Life in ways that are familiar to those living through the 2020 coronavirus pandemic. Conflicting information left people wary and fearful. College classes were held outside, sports were canceled, asks or challenged as unamerican, and fines imposed on those who refuse to wear them. Next, Christopher Mcknight countryrecounts how the experienced the events of a century ago and the lessons we might learn. He directs the Oregon University center for humanities. Cracks since the pandemic has begun, for our purposes, since we shut down in march, they thing that has been driving our analysis here as historians is what is the historical precedent . Obviously, 1918 is the one that comes to mind and we have nobody better to tell us about 1918 christophernd nichols. Hes an associate professor of history at oregon state. Hes the director of the Oregon State Center for humanities and the founder of their citizenship and crisis initiative. Harvard andied at wes
[applause] the hardworking men and women kuharchie construction. Neighbors and friends from across pennsylvania. It is great to be back in the keystone state with workers for trump. [applause] all camerateful you out on a beautiful day, the first day of september as we start the road to victory on november 3. [applause] it really is great to be here with so many friends who supported this president and our administration from day one. Would you join me in thanking someone who has been a fighter for this administration . He has stood strong for an agenda that made America Great again in our first three years and has seen this nation and state through a trying time . Congressman fred keller, thank you for your great leadership in the house of representatives and for america. [applause] with also great to be here two future members of congress who i know are going to stand with this president and our agenda for four more years. Join me in thanking Lisa Schaller and jim. Pennsylvania needs
Millions of these jobs overseas. Your vote will decide whether we protect lawabiding americans for whether we give free reign to violence anarchists and agitators and criminals who threaten our citizens. Paul lets bring in our panel wall street journal columnist and deputy Editorial Page Editor dan hand injury and columnist mariana stacy and board member cant help peterson. Dan after the Democratic Convention was clear they want to make the election about a referendum about trumpery did trumps exceed in response here to making it about something broader a broader Electoral Choice in what choice did he frame . Well i think he and the republicans did indeed succeed at that wall. They watched the Democratic Convention and they recognized it was loaded up almost entirely on appealing to voters on the basis of the president s personality and the democrats these are political events in the target certain slices of you left it at the democrats it was Younger Voters and thats why they adopted