of his images are antiheroes poor derelict down and out. his photos long went unpublished. today the need ukrainian is one of the foremost contemporary photographers but yes the maya moore to go photo 1st and then ask. if the answer is no i did lead they go. throughout his career boris me focused on people living at the edges of society. is well known series case history from the 1990 s. portrays invalid s children and the dispossessed in his home city kharkiv after the collapse of the soviet union. whether of nakedness or need the images are brutally direct often hard to look at me kind of takes a different view. than you have thought they do. it s more compassion. maybe even
people who don t want to be dispossessed for a price that you involuntarily offer them without clear congressional authorization. so declaring a national emergency won t get them around that? i don t think so. certainly didn t get president truman around that during a real war crisis in north korea. i think predicting what the current courts will do is a difficult thing. but whatever they do, the president clearly will be abusing his powers here and it will contribute to the pattern of abuse that the house of representatives both the judiciary committee and the intelligence committee and the oversight committee are about to begin investigating systematically. not a matter of pulling an impeachment trigger all of a sudden but a matter of filling out the record of how this president is abusing his powers. the pattern of abuse is striking
and thousands of people have begun streaming through to pay their respects to the body of senator robert kennedy. for 2 days mourners lined 25 blocks outside st. patrick s cathedral to pass by kennedy s coffin. for the service itself, 2,000 mourners crammed the cathedral. they included the rich and the powerful and the famous but also the poor and the dispossessed, farm workers, people who felt close to rfk. bobby s father, joe, is too ill to attend the funeral. his only surviving son, ted, delivers the eulogy. he had to be tested immediately. the world expected him. i d rather not be idolized
aspirations. and so part of it really was his ambition. and he went to mississippi to see the worst poverty of all. have you ever had a job? how long ago? about 15 months ago. we went down together to mississippi, and we saw people without income. he saw grandmothers and mothers who could not provide breakfast nor even lunch for their children. he said to me i ve been to third world places and i ve never seen anything like this. it was so shocking to see that kind of thing in the united states. he spent time in the inner cities and was moved by those experiences and became more and more an advocate for the dispossessed. he had a sense of touch. he could rub a kid s cheek or he could try to get a child to respond. and that was a very different sense of the tough bobby kennedy that i had known before his
centuries white women have invested in white veemcy because their whiteness aftered them a particular kind of power that their gender does not. explain what you mean by that. as a historian i explore white women s economic effective investments in the institution of slavery and what that has led to understand is that there s this broader historical context we need to keep in mind when we re looking at white women s voting patterns today. and as we look at their support, their overwhelming support of donald trump. and so what i meant was that we tend to think of white women as primarily focusing on their gendered oppression, that because they are oppressed as women, that that oppression will allow for them to ally and to sympathize with other dispossessed and disempowered peoples in. the nation. but my research actually shows