In the mountain pacific time zones, 202 7488001, and if you are a member of Law Enforcement and want to give your perspective, you can cause at 202 7488002. You can post on twitter at cspan wj. Or facebook. Com cspan. Monmouth university released a recent poll taking a look at relations between police and minority communities. Here are some of the findings from that pole. It showed 87 of those polled felt that individuals of their race are more likely than whites to experience Excessive Force. 49 of white americans say police are more likely to use Excessive Force against a black culprit, and 39 of whites say police are just as likely to use Excessive Force regardless of race. That was done by monmouth university. Atre is more to the poll their website. Several communities are reaching out to dialogue with members of minority communities on the topic of policing. I will show you a couple. This from kansas city, kansas. Saying the mayor once members of the community to share their exper
Doing and twitter and on facebook and on youtube. Thank you for spend your evening with us. The conversation will begin in a second grade that were going to have a conversation in the first part of it and then we welcome you to join in the conversation hurried but those of you that are members of the charge town community, at the bottom of your screen, you will see a q a tab and you will click on that. And you can post your question. At some point during the course of the evening, our staff will let you know when your question has been selected and then a few moments later, we will put you up on the screen. So make sure your broadcast ready at that point. Before we move on, i want to thank our partners for social justice and georgetown. Tremendous partners in this event. They have some Pretty Amazing resources on these topics. And on their website. And there are also on our website so feel free to check those out. When our guests first accepted this invitation of few weeks ago, we are
Spiked and had so many cases, we were very h flat. We had very little growth in our covid19 cases, and then in the last two weeks weve had a significant spike, taken in the northwest, arkansas, northwest part of the state which is one of our morehi high density growh areas of the state. So thats what were watching very carefully. We still have fewer than 200 deaths as a result of this virus here in arkansas. We had fewer than 200 hospitalized. We still have capacity. We still optimistic about it but it is a concern, whenever you see that significant spike there in northwest arkansas so were watching it very carefully. Obviously have to manage our way through this risk just what everyone else. Host as of yesterday, 448 new cases come six more deaths. What do you attribute those rises to . Guest thats what were digging into, and, of course, were doing more testing dramatically across the state. Our goal last month was to do 2 of the population which is 60,000 in one month. We actually be
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Constitution Center. I am the president of this institution and this is such a happy day to celebrate the collaboration between the National Constitution center and cspan. [applause] cspan has a mission to bring unfiltered information about the u. S. Government to american citizens and that coincides with the Constitution Centers mission which i want you to reside along with me to inspire our guests and viewers. The National Constitution center is the only institution in america chartered by congress to disseminate information about the u. S. Constitution on a nonpartisan basis. Beautiful. That was so well done. [applause] i was so thrilled when my friend and colleague susan swain, the head of cspan, came just a few months ago, or rather weeks ago, and said, we have this great new book on the president s. Let us launch it at the National Constitution center. It is such an honor to welcome back to the Constitution Center the great founder of cspan, b
Politically, militarily. Country, ourhis views on gender and racial equality are shaped by the experiences in world war ii. There were black americans, hundreds of thousands of them, who served in the war mostly in allblack units. It was a segregated military. Many of them had a double v campaign. Victory against fascist opponents overseas and victory against racism at home. And the dignity, the empowerment, the sense of service, the sense of cohesion that that experience brought to black america was a propulsion system for the Civil Rights Movement after the war. The same for gender equality. We had 19 million american women working outside of the home during world war ii. Many of them went back to the homemakers after the war. But you dont put that genie back in the model for long. It showed women that they had an opportunity to do whatever men could do, that they could do things that men could do as well, if not better. Whether it was riveting together a ship, working in a science l