in a safe neighborhood. i live in a government high-rise. gangbangers and drug dealers walk down our halls every day. my neighbors and i were scared. we called the police. but they can t keep us safe. the housing authority told me, if i bought a gun, to protect myself, they would throw me to the streets. if i m not free because of my address today, what makes you think you ll be free tomorrow? i marched behind martin luther king jr. at selma, i know my rights, now i have my gun. i am the national rifle association of america and i m freedom s safest place. and it isn t just josephine bird, either. recent pew poll found that 54% of african-americans believe owning a gun does more to protect them than pose a risk. so should this ad make anti-gun
it s just so many amazing stories of heroism on board that flight which crashed into the flight in shanksville and saved so many lives in washington, d.c. we ll pause now so we can honor those people. to shift the story from states rights to slavery as the root cause of the civil war. at selma to montgomery, little rock central high, tuskegee airmen and martin luther king jr. memorial, we tell the story of civil rights, and during this recent 50th anniversary of the voting rights march, we engaged young people from across the country, including from ferguson, missouri.
crime, bad schools, instead always pointing again to the white communities if white guilt is going to carry you to the next plateau. just not realistic. so we ve lost moral clarity in terms of dealing with slavery, reconstruction, the fight against legal segregation in this country. well, but part of what you re saying is, as hard as that was, and as brave as those people were, that was kind of easy, pardon the expression, black and white, and now it gets really complicated. correct. well i mean it s like george said. one of the unfortunate things about the speech the president gave at selma, and most of it was great, he actually made really good points, it was very rousing. but he just felt compelled to have to throw in this argument that there is still the problem because that the voter i.d. laws across
and show what s going on with that server. this weekend the book stores that are still open in your neighborhood. amen. both the chains and the great local ones that save our civilization are carrying on our book shelves your book. the presidency in black and white. that s why you re here. not only why you re here. thank you for coming on. david, i watch you, you are the gladiator of the 21st century. you are something. coming up david korn. president obama s strategy relies on the most unlikely of allies, iran. working with iraqi forces in their battle against isis. president obama seems to have a plan. it s called iran. tomorrow is the 50th anniversary of the march at selma. back then it was over the right to vote. today thanks to an assault on voting rights and their leader reince priebus, it still is. the top guy in foreign relations could be indicted this
on both of those lists. the changes that state government wanted in mississippi, they were seen as too racist to be approved. while mississippi was under federal oversight. but the second that federal oversight was lifted, mississippi pushed ahead. since that big supreme court ruling last summer, republicans in congress have talked occasionally about maybe some kind of legislative fix for the voting rights act, some way to bring the law back, strengthen the law again. congressman eric cantor was the biggest talker of them all. he started the last couple of years making civil rights pilgrimages to the south with congressman john lewis. he walked across the bridge at selma with john lewis. he came back from those pilgrimages saying yes, we ought to do something to prop up the voter righting act that the supreme court destroyed, but he never actually signed on for legislation to do that, even