Tv,ext on American History the u. S. Commission on civil rights hosts a talk titled, stonewall at 50 the movement for lgbt civil rights by historian and author david carter. Stonewall was a sixday gay rights uprising that began during a police raid on june 28, 1969 in new york citys Greenwich Village. We will now turn to our next iteration of the commission speaker series, this one titled stonewall at 50 the movement for lgbt civil rights. Thank you for the topic. June has come to be known as pride month. Street demonstrations began at the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village in new york city. Many view these demonstrations as a critical moment in the struggle for lgbt civil rights. 2016, in recognition of that history, president barack obama, the clares on monument declared a monument at the Stonewall Inn. We will hear more about how this was a catalyst for the lgbt Rights Movement. Discrimination on the basis of Sexual Orientation and gender identity is, unfortunately, still prevalent
thanks for joining us tonight. cnn tonight with alisyn camerota is starting right now. alisyn, hello. good evening, everyone. i m alisyn, camerota, welcome to cnn tonight. if unconventional is what ron desantis was going for tonight he got it. he decided to launch his campaign on twitter. the live stream crashed, the sound cut in and out but eventually desantis made his case. you can set your clock to january 20, 2025 at high noon because on the west side of the u.s. capitol i will be taking the oath of office as the 47th president of the united states. no excuses, i will get the job done. tonight our panel shares their take on what this means for the race for the white house. plus the culture wars strike again. this time target is pulling some rainbow themed products from store shelves before pride month before workers reportedly made customers feel unsafe. and tina turner dies at the age of 83. so many classic songs, so many electric performances and her chall
your podcasts. the news continues with jake tapper and cnn tonight. welcome to cnn tonight. i m jake tapper. tonight with exactly three weeks until the critical midterm elections here in the united states, candidates across the country in key races are increasingly taking extremism to the extreme. but what exactly is the definition of extremism? obviously that depends on who you ask. in a new ad airing in pennsylvania, republican u.s. senate candidate dr. mehmet oz paints himself as a middle-of the-road type of guy. his opponent fetterman is extreme for supporting criminal justice reform and supporting traditional democratic economic plans. guys like john fetterman take everything to the extreme. extremism on both sides makes things worse. we need balance, less extremism in washington. i m sure fetterman would respond that most of the extremism in contemporary american politics is coming from inside dr. oz s own party, but extremism, extremist, that s an insult we r
this week s episode top artist and composure lori anderson who s incredible. talked about the death of her husband rock legend and also the death of her beloved dog. some of the unexpected ways she fell after their death. the puck has comes out tomorrow morning, you can find on apple podcast, wherever yothe news co. t. welcome to cnn tonight. i m jake tapper. tonight, with exactly three weeks until the critical midterm elections here in the united states, candidates across the country are increasingly taking extremism to the extreme, but what exactly is the definition of extremism? obviously that depends on who you ask. in a new ad airing in pennsylvania, dr. mehmet oz paints himself is a middle of the road kind of guy. he labels his democratic opponent, lieutenant government john fetterman, as extreme for supporting criminal justice reform and supporting economic democratic plans. guys like john fetterman take everything to extreme. extremism on both sides makes things
supervisor ronen: present. supervisor safai: present. supervisor stefani: present. supervisor walton: present. mr. president, you have a quorum. president walton: thank you so much. and i will entertain a motion to excuse supervisor chan made by supervisor preston, seconded by supervisor mandelman. madame clerk, on the motion. on the motion to excuse supervisor chan from this meeting today, supervisor preston? supervisor preston: aye. supervisor ronen: aye. supervisor safai: aye. supervisor stefani: aye. supervisor walton: aye. supervisor dorsey: aye. supervisor mandelman: aye. supervisor mar: aye. supervisor melgar: aye. supervisor peskin: aye. there are 10 ayes. president walton: thank you, motion carries. supervisor chan is excused from today s board meeting. the san francisco board of supervisors acknowledges that we are on the unceded ancestral homeland of the ramaytush ohlone who are the original inhabitants of the san francisco pen