History of the universal art museum. We talked about the ethics of especially of historical. We looked at some of the oldest restitution and discussions like the parthenon marbles. We talked the problem of antiquities that have been looted in recent years and that end up in public museums and weve talked about calls to decolonize the museum today were going to take a special case a native american Cultural Heritage primarily in the United States and canada for a little bit in. As always, we approach these issues from the point of view of art history, museums, studies, human rights. There are many other ways of approaching these issues. So first, a reminder that wherever we are in the americas are always on native land. If you go to this wonderful website, you can put your zip code and you can discover a native map of your area. You can figure out where you are from a native. And here we are. This is the bay area and we are somewhere over here on the historic territory of the part when
his burst is strong for political vengeance and he wants to stop jordan from issuing a subpoena to a key attorney in the d.a. s office. the judge denied a request for the restraining order setting a hearing next week. in bragg s lawsuit he claims jordan is perpetrating an unconstitutional attempt to undermine the case against donald trump. chairman jim jordan says bragg is trying to obstruct the congressional investigation and it is getting personal. alvin bragg used federal funds to indict a former president for no crime and then when we ask questions about it and want to investigate he takes us to court. we want to talk to someone who left the d.a. s office a year ago who wrote a book on this very subject. did all kinds of interviews. we aren t allowed to talk to him to do our duty. they are obstructing our constitutional duty to do oversight. harris: bryan llenas on the story for us today. in the lawsuit bragg s office is asking a federal judge to issue a court order
The most authoritative history that ive personally ever read of the School Choice movement is so thoroughly researched it really it really feels encyclopedic to me. Almost like it is everything you would ever need to know. I wanted to first ask, im obviously familiar with your incredible work as education reporter and. I know a lot of education reporters have these sort of crystallizing moments in reporting where were in classroom or with a family and we have an aha moment. Im curious, know if you had one of those moments that led you to start writing this book. Its a good i think i think you know i started thinking about the School Choice movement when i was reporting about segregation in florida and as part of that reporting, we interviewed our team interviewed just dozens of families that were essentially trying to escape the segregated sort of low schools in this particular county in florida. And i was i was sort of struck by what the options were. You know, there other Public Scho
Pete welcome to a Special Edition of Jesse Watters primetime. 8 00 pm on the east coast and 7 00 pm and gods country. Im holding down the fort on friday night. Anarchy rippling through america. Seemingly from coast to coast. The core tenets of our republic are the target of an antiamerican, pro terror she hawed. That is what they call it. That is what they are. The kind of images you thought were reserved for the War On Terror that we saw overseas have come home. Statues of George Washington defiled with islamic scarves covering his face . And the words genocidal warmonger spraypainted on them. At George Washington university. And radicals sporting Hamas Headbands trying to turn our College Campuses into the third world. [ shouting ] [ bleep ] [ shouting ] [ shouting ] [ shouting ] [ shouting ] pete but just like in the after mentioned War On Terror, the battle may have been a bit messy. But The Good Guys never waver. While they scream to burn it all down, the brave Men And Women In Un
Theres not a lot of in this book i must love you because ive been up to since two in the morning. Ill be getting up at two tomorrow morning. So those of you so how many, if any, you had a chance to read the book yet youre going great. Okay, okay, great. Okay. Just we are going to have time for questions so that i dont want to make a fitness contest. So there is a mic there. But if you have trouble getting to the mic, ill come to you. So just, you know, well well jump into your questions, the conversations talk up here for a bit and then well come to because obviously you all got a lot on your minds. So, so this book was so fascinating to me. Im so glad you wrote it because was its hard for a journalist. I mean, as a journalist, youre kind of trained to. Keep your business out of it. I mean, i know that thats, you know, some people are different, but the way were trained, we have been trained is to keep your story out of it. So was it that made you want to both combine your reportage wi