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Today in History

Today in History
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What America looked like in 1921 at the start of the Roaring 20s

This 1921 photo of Cassville, Wisconsin, shows an automobile repair shop and a shoe store. The radio was everything Bettmann/Getty Images In 1919, after World War I, the U.S. government lifted a ban on civilian radio ownership and transmission, and it wasn t long before commercial radio became a favorite source of entertainment. The first baseball game to be broadcast on the radio was one between the Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies on August 5, 1921. Gould the Light Man Getty Images And with the increasing popularity of radio, the personal electronics industry boomed. This store in Stockton, California, was billed as the only real radio store in San Joaquin Valley.

Carole Owens: As shape of hate morphs, so do measures against it

On April 20, 1871, the House approved An Act to Enforce the Provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United Sates and other provisions. Post-Civil War, the 13th 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution were passed. In 1865, the 13th amendment abolished slavery. In 1868, the 14th Amendment defined citizenship and guaranteed due process and equal protection under the law. In 1870, the 15th Amendment precluded abridgement — that is, civil rights granted by the federal government or the Constitution such as “the right of citizens of the United States to vote” could not be denied or abridged by state law. ‘The KKK Act’ Notwithstanding, vigilante groups like the Ku Klux Klan threatened African Americans and their white allies in the South. Thus the 1871 act was dubbed “The KKK Act.” It meant to stop the violence by giving President Ulysses S. Grant the right to intervene and take actions including suspending habeas corpus, deploying the U.S. m

Maybe Republicans will be just fine | Opinion

Maybe Republicans will be just fine | Opinion Updated Jan 31, 2021; Posted Jan 31, 2021 Tom Deignan, a writer in Woodbridge, says Donald Trump lost Hudson and Passaic counties but he performed much more strongly in both than he did in 2016 despite all of his anti-immigrant rants and COVID-19 mishandlings. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)AP Facebook Share By Tom Deignan It’s fitting that Liberty State Park and Ellis Island are located within the boundaries of Hudson County. A century after huddled masses from Russia, Italy and Ireland streamed past the Statue of Liberty, Hudson County remains a magnet for those born abroad, with West New York and Union City among America’s most immigrant-heavy districts.

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - CNN - 20181019:06:34:00

people who break the law are criminals. these individuals are coming to the border seeking asylum and they are willing to go through that legal process of seeking asylum. and the president has turned them into criminals and he has turned his back we don t know what they re going to do. that s true. here s the thing. you can t judge them before they do it. the president we know that in most of the cases, you even said, chris, that most of these people are coming christine even said it. most people are coming because of economic hardship. that is not a reason that s right, you can make an asylum case, you have the right to try. you cannot come into this country on asylum because of economic the left wants to make it seem like you want people to come in. rhetorically you have to deal with it. on the other side, rick, you have to think about it because if they pass something that s like the 1921 emergency quota act again, i went back and looked at the legislative hi

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