that is testimony from mike pence s former adviser regarding former president donald trump s repeated efforts to get pence to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. we will hear much more of the key moments from yesterday s january 6th hearing, including the vice president s close call with the mob, very close call that day. and the pardon request from the architect of the president s election scheme. plus, new reporting that the house select committee now wants to talk to conservative activist ginni thomas. she is, of course, the wife of supreme court justice clarence thomas. good morning. welcome to morning joe. it is friday, june 17th. along with joe and me, we have white house bureau chief at politico and the host of way to too early, jonathan lemire. washington post s jackie alemany. host of politicians nation and host of the national action network, reverend al sharpton. and nbc legal analyst joyce vance. good morning to everybody. joe, anothe
Benefit from being white. It is 1 amount down to the penny and its a lot of money. Shes here to explain white bonus, fascinating. All right, have a great show. Victor. Thank you very much. Lets do it right now well first of all Keeping Track of the protests, breaking out at College Campuses across the us right now, its not easy the protests are broadly referred to as propalestinian. Most are antiwar. Some are anti israel. They include some muslim students. They include some jewish students some are at major east Coast Ivy League schools, other smaller west coast colleges some protests involve students camping on school grounds, that happening right now in the campus of northeastern in boston weve seen what looks like students being detained and some items that this encampment being cleared columbia universitys in camp been has been a flashpoint to the senate. There has passed a resolution friday to investigate how School Leaders have been handling the protests now, the response from ma
questions. yes. it was tough. people who came to texas during the war, many people from georgia and alabama and mississippi rushed into texas to try to get one step ahead of emancipation. so these are really hard doctor core people. they d had their own country. they won the last battle. they thought they d never been defeated. the people who ran the freedoms bureau there said that texas was particularly difficult place. yeah. what have within by talking through the past five, six years? why was it important for the president to sign the juneteenth bill and what can we learn? i think we re walking through a time when people realize we are still living with the legacy of slavery. i think the murder of george floyd 2020, in may, and then juneteenth afterwards, people were asking, how did we get
WUNC's Race and Southern Culture Reporter Leoneda Inge reflects on the past year, and the standout moments and people who fought against injustice in North Carolina.
necessarily always have exclusionary policies. and senator whitehouse has built a reputation for himself fighting for equal rights and diversity and progressive civil rights causes. that s right. he s a known progressive, he s someone who fights for diversity on a regular basis publicly. last week he co-sponsored the juneteenth bill, making it a federal holiday. this week the senator in answering questions about this, he actually did defend the club as having a long tradition of being a family club. he has said that in the past he would push for them to work on improving diversity, but he s not put forward any evidence of those conversations or pushed them to release the statistics of membership that he of course has cited in this statement. and i didn t hear in any of the statements from the club or the senator just a point-blank statement, the club has african-american members. no one has said that. they use words like diverse, nonwhite. could clear it up, they haven t. sunlen, t