ultimate influencers of the culture. it is so many fire women right now. like what? none of this came easy. we have come through a lot. we have stood back up, and we ll always keep standing back up. you know, hip hop was such a male dominated genre for a bit there. at least that was the stuff popular to people that they knew about. but in the very early days women were right there. how hard was it for women you re one of the first to come in and break through and make a stance, make their names known? you know, when i take a look back, you know, hindsight, i see the rough patches in terms of what made it so difficult. while i was in it, i couldn t tell. i was young. i was 16, 17 years old. you know, when you say when you re younger things just go by
man, hung him in a tree. who would do something this hideous? in my vision, a brown-skinned man in a gray casket, i couldn t tell who he was. and that s when i began to call all my children. when i think about the hurt my mom went through, i can t talk about it. the mobile police department just didn t want to believe that mobile would still have klan in it. but they did. the fact that klansmen lived across the street from where this happened, it was something that the police officers found more to be a coincidence. michael donald was an innocent, good samaritan, not a thug. the likely suspects were identified. but we had the wrong people. we felt the cops and the klan working hand in hand. we re calling upon mobile s black community to be as cool as
once protested against abortion rights. in high, school i was writing essays and reading them to my classmates about why i thought they were wrong. until she herself found herself at a family planning clinic to get a pill. i was surrounded by protesters screaming at me. i was, like i m on your side. but inside the, clinic she started to reconsider. i couldn t tell who is different abortion, who is there for plan b or contraception or a pap smear. at that, moment i realize the black and whiteness that i had been taught and been proclaiming for so long wasn t the reality in the world. now, as an ob/gyn, she performs abortions and she s not alone. diane horvath also grew up catholic. the teaching on abortion was a little bit confusing, because they talked a lot about abortion being wrong and a moral. but also about loving your neighbor and being god s hands in the world. she too became an abortion
showing pictures of blood on the ground in the subway station there. were you able to see how many victims there were? did you see any of the victims? all i saw was people close to me who were on the floor. there were some people whose pants were covered in blood. some people. it didn t even seem like their blood because they were okay and walking and helping other people. i couldn t tell who was injured. all i know is i saw like a lot of blood on the cart on the floor of the train cart and it was, yeah. i don t know how many victims there were, i did not see who had injuries. all i know is people filed out, people forgot bags and shoes and they just left everything to just get out of there as soon as possible. yav, how many people would you estimate were in that car with you? if i had to say, i would say