end you make it incredibly exciting. i am curious to know your previous books were about al capone so what made you choose this subject? it is funny because i did not have on my radar at all until 10 or 12 years ago i heard our rabbi give a sermon to think of yourself as a partner with guide to change the world not just yourself but think about how we can transform our existence and he said the birth control pill think of how the inventors must have set out to create one of the most important inventions of all time to change human dynamics, marriage and reproduction. but he never said how we got it and i became curious and it struck me as odd that anybody would have on their agenda to control fertility and 50s so who did that? and then i found this incredible story these underdogs with no government support doing what everybody told the of was impossible. host: sketch out what life was like before the pill. guest: people today i think many people take it for grante
this is about an hour and 20 minutes. would evening, ladies and gentlemen. i think we will get started. we are expecting lots more people, that we don t know what the traffic or the subway situation is. i am susan jones, i am also the director of the museum of the city of new york. i am so delighted to welcome you all here for this program. women rebels, margaret sanger and the birth-control movement at 100, tonight, author and journalist katha pollitt will lead a conversation with activists and scholars. a singer viagra for, loretta ross and historian linda gordon. to mark the 100th anniversary of the movement possible origin in 1914, table discuss sanger s legacy and the birth-control movement for activists today. i really do thank c-span for recognizing the importance, and being here to record tonight s program. this is part of our ongoing activist new york series. all of which are sponsored by the puffin foundation. our series is done in conjunction with an exhibition o
/localcontent. you re watching american history tv. all weekend, every weekend on c-span. up next, a discussion about the 20th century birth control advocate margaret sanger and her legacy. we hear from a panel of historians, activists, and her own grandson. they discuss the impact of race, social class, and politics on the birth-control movement. this is about an hour and 20 minutes. good evening, ladies and gentlemen. i think we will get started. we are expecting lots more people, but we don t know what the traffic or the subway situation is. i am susan henshaw jones, i am also the ronay menschel director of the museum of the city of new york. i am so delighted to welcome you all here for this program. women rebels, margaret sanger and the birth-control movement at 100. tonight, author and journalist katha pollitt will lead a conversation with activists and scholars of the productive rights movement. sanger biographer, ellen chesler, reproductive justice activist loretta
pennsylvania, michigan, nevada, georgia, arizona. do you solemnly swear to protect the country about enemies foreign and domestic? there were error messages from tab grulation machines. that you take this without any purpose of evasion. also in arizona, the attorney general announced that mail-in ballots has been stolen from mailboxes and hidden under a rock. well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office upon which you re about to enter so help you god. i do. congratulations. oh, so if the election was rigged in arizona but it wasn t. why did the vice president swear in the state s new senator? i thought it was rigged. it seems that people are slowly backing away from the president. you had the attorney general earlier this week sort of backing up and then you had mitch mcconnell talking about the new administration. his way of backing up. you have the vice president doing the same. so, willie, the situation has gotten so sad for the president
while wearing those mittens will the sound be sustained? todd: no one will ever know. has there ever been a week was more appropriate? jillian: has there ever been a week we talked about this much? on that note good morning, you are watching fox and friends first . todd: we start with the fox news alert, thousands of national guard troops banished to parking garages after protecting the capital on inauguration day. griff jenkins live in washington with the question everyone is wondering. how does this happen? reporter: capital police have to answer that question because when guardsmen told politico we feel betrayed by what happened, thousands of national guard troops in the capitol grounds by the us capitol police, one group said they had been resting in the senate office building only to be forced to relocate to a nearby parking garage. the temperatures in the low 40s, very uncomfortable, the same guardsmen told politico yesterday dozens of senators and congressmen lock