around town. fellow congolese/houston transplants guy mullet and constant, ngouala. chefs when not tending their crops, prepare an outdoor meal for the lombos and a group of friends and fellow farmers. congolese, but with a definite cajun touch. or is it the other way around? a slow cooked stew of sausage, shrimp, dried mackerel, and malabar spinach over fufu. then texas beef brochettes marinated in chilies and cilantro and maggi bouillon with a ratatouille made from produce grown right here. what did you all think when, when you heard that you were going to be resettled in texas? constant: in, in in my country when people are talking about texas, they know that is where many farmer is. anthony: really? and now do you feel welcome? do you feel the community is happier here? gertrude: wonderful. constant: the first challenge was, eh, the language. gertrude: it wasn t easy. even now, it s not easy.
white man and this black man were able to sit down together, not at the table of plbrotherho, but certainly at the table of mutual acceptance and the tolerance for a rigorous conversation that was sometimes brutal, often robust, but at least honest. and they had a set of facts that they agreed upon. and together they went forward to try to forge a kind of compact and a peace in this country. it wasn t easy, but it begins with acknowledging the truth before us and the facts that we both have to argue with. michael eric dyson, great to have you back on the program. thanks for joining us tonight. really appreciate it. always great to be here. thank you. we ll be right back. then i realized something was missing. me. my symptoms were keeping me from being there. so, i talked to my doctor and learned humira is for people who still have symptoms of crohn s disease after trying other medications. and the majority of people on humira saw significant symptom relief and many achieved remis
brutal, often robust, but at least honest. and they had a set of facts that they agreed upon. and together they went forward to try to forge a kind of compact and a peace in this country. it wasn t easy, but it begins with acknowledging the truth before us and the facts that we both have to argue with. michael eric dyson, great to have you back on the program. thanks for joining us tonight. really appreciate it. always great to be here. thank you. we ll be right back. t people, i look like. most people. but on the inside, i feel chronic, widespread pain. fibromyalgia may be invisible to others, but my pain is real. fibromyalgia is thought to be caused by overactive nerves. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i m glad my doctor prescribed lyrica. for some, lyrica delivers effective relief from fibromyalgia pain. and improves function. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions, suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worse depressi
the movement. thank you both for being here. rachel, as i was looking at some of that video, when i was in ferguson, in baltimore, on the ground reporting during these incidents, i could not help but think of the things, items, inspirations that came from martin luther king that were said over the years. how were you able to put an unfortunately busy bunch of decades when we look at violence together in just this one documentary, rachel? that s a good question. it wasn t easy. it was obviously a challenging effort, but, you know, it really wasn t, once we decided the spine of the documentary really was the story of the civil rights movement, we looked for symmetry. we looked for correlation. we looked for images that resonated with the president. that was sort of our guide in looking for some of the more contemporary stories that are in the documentary. so in the end, it wasn t
get lawyers sort of in a steady way, at least i should say they first were, when marc kasowitz was on the team. he has been one of the president s personal lawyers for a long time. he was on this russia team, then left, but he helped to get the team built that we see today. it wasn t easy. we have been reporting on this for a long time. either because people didn t want to do it, or more likely than not, lawyers were conflicted meaning they were working for firms that were already representing somebody with a stake in or being questioned by the mueller investigation. and so that has been the case all along and that is why we saw some sort of old hands who hadn t been at it for awhile brought back in the form of ty cobb and john dowd. now we are seeing, as you said, the president not happy, obviously, with his legal strategy the way it is going,