Was of President Trump, actually before the election and shortly after when i listened to him and he expressed this sentiment, which was, with Hillary Clinton and her transgressions and the way she handled the classified material and up to the secret server next to the bathroom up in new york, in her place, the president s position was, we need to move America Forward and we shouldnt go backwards on this or looking back. Lets move forward. And the public has litigated that. Thats where President Trump wanted it to be, but it wasnt to be because the left could not accept the idea that the American People had spoken. So they began to manufacture and continue the manufacturing of this Russian Investigation, allegations that there were investigation and i dont doubt that they made it. But we doubt that they had any impact on our election and we have seen zero evidence that the campaign of President Trump had any kind of relationship that went on with the russians that promoted or coluded i
Unregulated. Monday night at 8 00 eastern. Each week American History tv sit in on a lecture with one of the Nations College professors you could watch the classes here every saturday evening at 8 p. M. And midnight eastern. Next is West Virginia University Professor Krystal Frazier talks about the complexities of family life for African Americans in the north as well as the south during the mid20th century. The emmett till case is mentioned as a watershed moment in many of the stories that she highlights. [captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2015] good afternoon. Good afternoon. Professor frazier welcome back. Thank you for paying attention to the emails that i sent out. They were reminders about your papers. We are fortunate to have this collection. Just because it is a paper on the south come it doesnt count for your paper. Please Pay Attention to that. And the concert is on the 23rd. That could count as your activity. Consider that one. Remember to ask me about the on
Led a march for justice. Commemorating 54th anniversary of Martin Luther king jr. s march on washington. Speakers talked about race issues and the recent violence in charlottesville. This is two hours. Praises the lord. No justice, no peace. What do we want . Justice when do we want it . Now without further adieu, let us hear from our first speaker for the rally in front ofhe juicde is here now from Jay David Cox senior, the National President of afge. Brothers and sisters i come to you today from the American Federation of government employees. The people that said, government is good and government should stand for all of its citizens in an equal mannerism. Brother and sisters, i come to you today with love. Its time to that we bring back love to this country. Lets stop and think. Hatred of the stranger, people who are different. People who come from somewhere else. Speak another language. Have different couples eat different food. Who are we to turn away and ignore injustice in a na
And the kind of literature of world war i is very famous, wild widely rather, taught in schools. That walt not tour for literature of world war i in the united states. One of the real gaps in that story was the literature to which had been produced by africanamerican writers. So i was drawn to that, figuring out what kind ofs africanamericans were telling about the grate war, how africanamerican writers thought beside how it i impacted race in america. So africanamericans were caught up in americas entry into cold war 1 just as all americans were. And africanamericans volunteers. They bought liberty bostons and volunteered to serve in the in military, volunteered to serve as aid workers and nurses, and often with mixed effects. They Woodrow Wilson said that america was entering world war i to make the world save for democracy but america for africanamericans didnt feel very safe or democratic. So very unsure about going to fight for a political principles overseas they were just not re
Arizona. We hear arguments number 18 roe against wade. Quite often in many of our most famous decisions are ones that the court took that were quite unpopular. Lets go through a few cases that illustrate very dramatically and visually what it means to live in a society of 310 million different people who have helped stick together because they believe in a rule of law. Good evening and welcome to landmark cases. Were about twothirds of the way through our 12week series looking at Historic Supreme Court decisions. Tonights a 1954 case of School Segregation, brown v. Board of education. And were going to begin this evening by listening to linda brown on the roots of this case. My memory of brown began in the fall of 1950, in the quiet kansas city of topeka, where a mildmannered black man took his plump 7yearold daughter by the hand and walked briskly four blocks from their home to the allwhite school and tired without success to enroll his child. That trying to enroll their children in s