quickly. people are watching this and wondering maybe this is an event and it will all ride itself and go away. that s not going to happen. we are the posy, we got to take care of it. this is not right. trump is not hiding what he has in mind. john, mike pence s former chief of staff, mark schwartz, he was with pence during the capitol attack. he participated in the critical white house meeting on january 4th, we are talking about a top aide here. is this a good sign that the committee will get the full picture even if pence does not testify? it certainly helps. schwartz is body that s a straight shooter.
diana herself was totally overwhelmed at just the intense interest in her. at the sydney opera house, the drive through the city brought the people out in the tens of thousands to catch a glimpse of this woman the world had made so much fuss about. i took a photograph and someone through a small posy of flowers. it flicked onto diana s face and she got afraid initially but then she started to weep. it was so appalling, that i hadn t actually done anything wonderful or anything like that. it was an imposter syndrome, that she didn t really deserve this. in such a short time she went from being a nursery teacher to marrying the heir to the throne to this spotlight.
intense interest in her. at the sydney opera house, the drive through the city brought the people out in their tens of thousands to catch a glimpse of this woman the world had made so much fuss about. they were working through the crowds, i took the photograph and someone threw a small posy of flowers. it flicked on to diana s face and she got afraid initially, but then she started to weep. hadn t done anything specific like lime everest of something wonderful like that. there was a kind of sense of an imposter syndrome. she didn t really deserve this. in such a short time she went from being a nursery teacher to marrying the heir to the throne to stepping into this global spotlight with everybody watching her every move. i can t fathom the pressure that she felt. we all know how it ends, but it s a mistake to think that
private school choose intend to send them here in large part, they say, because of sharon briscoe. a progressive principal but it s her alleged conversation about race-based placement practices that are now the focus of a civil rights complaint. and she then informed me that wasn t the black class. she said that wasn t the black class? that is correct. how did you react to that? just a pit was in my stomach. i was like what do you mean? like, i don t understand. we have those? of the six total second grade classes at the atlanta public school, kyla posy says she was told by the principal that black students, including posy s daughter would only have a choice between two of the classes. in july, she and her husband who works as the school psychologist filed a federal complaint with the department of education. it may not be your 1950s segregation where you have signs
they believe brisco acted in good faith if their child s race was allegedly used as a factor in the class placement, they say they re in full support. i grew up where i was the only black child in the honors classes in my high school for four years. and when i say that i still have, you know, trauma based on it, i still have trauma based on it. it was very isolating. principal brisco. she is, you know, is a black woman. she went to a black college. she raised two black sons. there is no one on earth who can say that she does not care about black children. even the complainant, herself, has said that, you know, that her that brisco supposedly admitted to doing it to build community and so that no one black child is isolated in a classroom. reporter: but the posies say the principal violated the civil rights act of 1964 in using race to designate classes for black students. posy also alleges an after-school program she ran at the school was threatened to be cut in retaliation for h