we are live in salma, alabama. and a community that served as a major turning point in the civil rights movements. my question, is are there lessons from 1965 that we still need to learn today? plus, trump and, cpac the conservative conference is over. former president making a typical bombastic speeches he attempts to retake the white house. does he really have the momentum to capture the republican augmentation? and later, a spike in child labor with migrant children as young as 13, being used to clean blood in this houses. i want to know what the biden administration is doing to solve these. problems all of that and more is coming up. a good sunday morning. here i am katie phang. we begin the show with remembrance of a major turning point in the civil rights movement. biden is set to arrive in, selma alabama today to help commemorate the 58th anniversary of bloody sunday. march 7th, 1965, a group of 600 civil rights demonstrators led by activists john louis gil b
quickly. hannah, where is your investigation going to take you next? i am really interested in this idea of accountability for the corporations that are benefiting from this labor. you mentioned slaughterhouses, i think about children outside of the slaughterhouse, from the biggest meat processor in the world, gb us. in rural minnesota. and it was obvious there were children working there, i stood outside of the factory, talking to kids as young as 15 years old who were working until six i am, cleaning things like head splitters. and the department of labor eventually came in. but there were no charges for gbs, only a fine for the contractor who had brought these kids in. some of the parents were charged. i think right now this focus on the way the child labor laws are enforced, and whether there is enough accountability for these large, large companies