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Mar 29, 2024
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this is for florida, the smallest, but there are 13 volumes. thousands and thousands of pages in all. and this committee, joint committee dominated by republic gans, of course, who were a majority in congress at the time, took testimony in. washington on capitol hill in the capitol and also dispatched subcommittees across the south. most of the former confederate states, where testimony was taken in localities almost everywhere. a few states. it skipped a few states for reasons that can't get into and it. took testimony from hundreds and hundreds of witnesses. it was the first federal investigation that. i'm aware of the testimony from african-americans and also the first to my knowledge, the took testimony from women many women, both black and white, testified many african-americans. and much of that testimony is extremely poignant. there are witnesses who talk about walking 30 miles to get to the committee hearing room. there are witnesses who are murdered, it turns out, for testifying and the extraordinary forthrightness detail with which af
this is for florida, the smallest, but there are 13 volumes. thousands and thousands of pages in all. and this committee, joint committee dominated by republic gans, of course, who were a majority in congress at the time, took testimony in. washington on capitol hill in the capitol and also dispatched subcommittees across the south. most of the former confederate states, where testimony was taken in localities almost everywhere. a few states. it skipped a few states for reasons that can't get...
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Mar 29, 2024
03/24
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our next question is from sally in tampa, florida. first lady hillary clinton certainly did important work towards human rights for all people, and she noticed she's not mentioned. so i just wanted to provide some space here if she wanted to say anything about first lady hillary clinton. well, you know, hillary clinton certainly was a civil rights activist. if you if you go back to even her early days, right outside of law school work she did in law school as a student with internship projects. she also, you know, worked for marian wright edelman children's defense fund, everything that she did in terms of children's health care was looking for equality. but as i said, i had a limited amount of time and everyone seems to know a lot more about hillary and what she's done. and i wanted to really highlight some of the women who people don't know as much about, who we haven't studied or who are not our contemporary. so that was why made some of the choices i made within the time limitations. but hillary is certainly an individual who supp
our next question is from sally in tampa, florida. first lady hillary clinton certainly did important work towards human rights for all people, and she noticed she's not mentioned. so i just wanted to provide some space here if she wanted to say anything about first lady hillary clinton. well, you know, hillary clinton certainly was a civil rights activist. if you if you go back to even her early days, right outside of law school work she did in law school as a student with internship projects....
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Mar 29, 2024
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whether i'm in california in maryland, florida, alaska, no matter what, i want some type of standardization in regards to at least the basic level of care i'm going to get. so we standardize again a lot of those training systems or training programs to be able to do that. right, and at least to start providing a standardized level of care for these people who were getting hurt on the highways. so what it also did was, again, it also advance some of the hospital settings as well right, especially with trauma centers, east coast done a lot of things for advances in medicine and especially in pre-hospital medicine. and funny enough, maryland and baltimore specifically has done really a lot right in regards to advancing some of the pre-hospital care aspects. so for example, right with the ems systems, right. it helped to develop or at least fund and stuff like that are recognized trauma center as being an actual thing, right? so the shock trauma center down of downtown baltimore, y'all probably heard of it, right? dr. kiley was one of the founders for shock trauma and was one of the first shock
whether i'm in california in maryland, florida, alaska, no matter what, i want some type of standardization in regards to at least the basic level of care i'm going to get. so we standardize again a lot of those training systems or training programs to be able to do that. right, and at least to start providing a standardized level of care for these people who were getting hurt on the highways. so what it also did was, again, it also advance some of the hospital settings as well right,...
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Mar 28, 2024
03/24
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the fleet was discovered before the raid and brown had most of the gunpowder shipped to eastern florida before the marines landed. regardless, nicholas, the marines in a successful raid and they captured both forts with 88 cannons, 15 mortars and an abundance of ordnance and of no, this exceeds the number of guns transported by henry knox from fort ticonderoga to washington outside of boston. it's just that they were a thousand miles south of boston, and knox arrived with his cannons before the marines and sailors arrived theirs. but nonetheless, those cannons were used effectively throughout the rest of the war and in addition to that, governor brown at the time attempted to escape during the raid and he was placed on house and guarded by marines. he later complained that the marines and i, quote, use that discretion. all of my wines and other liquors as did everything else, they had occasion for. you know, now hopkins loaded, brown and the prize was captured by the marines. he departed for rhode island. brown was later used in a prisoner exchange to secure the release of american gene
the fleet was discovered before the raid and brown had most of the gunpowder shipped to eastern florida before the marines landed. regardless, nicholas, the marines in a successful raid and they captured both forts with 88 cannons, 15 mortars and an abundance of ordnance and of no, this exceeds the number of guns transported by henry knox from fort ticonderoga to washington outside of boston. it's just that they were a thousand miles south of boston, and knox arrived with his cannons before the...
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Mar 28, 2024
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they're going have east florida, west florida, which four more senators that are pro slavery, more representatives that are pro slavery and more enslaved people to count toward overall population under the 3/5 compromise. so just like they thought they could get five states out of texas, they're doing a lot of thinking about how much can get out of florida. and i'll talk about how slavery plays into this exploration kind of fever at the end of the lecture, because politics are really heavily involved here, and it's not immediately apparent in the era because we haven't reached age of the compromise of 1820 and the compromise of 1850, but slavery is alive issue. and there is going to be immediately questions about where slavery can go. right. last time we talked about the northwest ordinance predates all of this. no slavery in those sort of parts of the great lakes territories. right here, there's going to be a kind of greater as slaveholders start to want to move west, especially into places tennessee and georgia which we'll talk about next time when we about the kind of first major waves of indig
they're going have east florida, west florida, which four more senators that are pro slavery, more representatives that are pro slavery and more enslaved people to count toward overall population under the 3/5 compromise. so just like they thought they could get five states out of texas, they're doing a lot of thinking about how much can get out of florida. and i'll talk about how slavery plays into this exploration kind of fever at the end of the lecture, because politics are really heavily...
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Mar 27, 2024
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it's just what i have to do on my little island in florida. i have to go to the post office to get the mail, but when it's winter and it's freezing in cleveland or new york, when it's summer and it's hot, when there are crowds all these women, mostly women waiting in line. and in the new york city post office, a big post office, they had a lady's window, but in most places they did not. so they would be waiting in line and they wouldinly make it up to desk and they'd give their name. and they might often be presented with a letter like this one telling this woman that her husband been killed at gettysburg and the woman would break down or she would be given a whole stack, undelivered letters that she had written to her husband that that the minute that the postmaster started to hand them over, she knew that he was dead. so the postmaster in cleveland, a man named joseph william briggs decided that he just wouldn't he was not going to let the post office become a public place of grief for these women. and he started this system of home delivery
it's just what i have to do on my little island in florida. i have to go to the post office to get the mail, but when it's winter and it's freezing in cleveland or new york, when it's summer and it's hot, when there are crowds all these women, mostly women waiting in line. and in the new york city post office, a big post office, they had a lady's window, but in most places they did not. so they would be waiting in line and they wouldinly make it up to desk and they'd give their name. and they...
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Mar 25, 2024
03/24
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gloria was number three -- florida was number three. it was a reign of terror. you were afraid of how you spoke to a white person, man, woman, or child. you could be lynched for anything. restrained to vote, joining the naacp, looking at a white person in the wrong way, speaking to them in a way that in like, not get off of the sidewalk when a white person walked down the street. host: let's talk to constance in virginia. caller: i am a fan of miss joyce . i am 71 so i have known and seen the uphill battle that our citizens have had with the quality. this is something even as a little child, i saw this as wrong. you need to include everyone and not call people black and white, why not just call ourselves people. that is what we are, we are all human beings and we all have the same needs. we need to have better understand with one another. i believe that some of the religions tell people apart instead of bringing them together. especially when republicans use it like they are trying to do now. i don't like that at all. i want to see religion out of our government
gloria was number three -- florida was number three. it was a reign of terror. you were afraid of how you spoke to a white person, man, woman, or child. you could be lynched for anything. restrained to vote, joining the naacp, looking at a white person in the wrong way, speaking to them in a way that in like, not get off of the sidewalk when a white person walked down the street. host: let's talk to constance in virginia. caller: i am a fan of miss joyce . i am 71 so i have known and seen the...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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so, you know, florida, for instance, now required of the victims of communism. is this the kind thing that we ought to be pushing incorporate in the historic history and or citizenship instruction more? or does this feel like something that's just not going to make sense to, you know, most american parents, voters? i do worry about heaping too much response on schools and on instructors and when i was thinking about this, is this general story we've been telling, we've seen that as other. form eight forming, formative institutions have weakened more burdens, been placed upon the schools. and that was kind of revelatory for me during the pandemic was. all of the problems generated with the school meals program when the schools were down because of covid and was just revealed it was it was a kind of a moment of recognition me that our public schools are just places of instruction for so many students. they're places for a meal that in many cases that the only place where they have adults them for any given amount of time. there's no religion allowed in them anymor
so, you know, florida, for instance, now required of the victims of communism. is this the kind thing that we ought to be pushing incorporate in the historic history and or citizenship instruction more? or does this feel like something that's just not going to make sense to, you know, most american parents, voters? i do worry about heaping too much response on schools and on instructors and when i was thinking about this, is this general story we've been telling, we've seen that as other. form...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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she florida, pennsylvania, sylvania, new hampshire. and i have my approach as a journalist is. i've continued to write about this. and my strategy is really pass this law. what are the consequences? what are the. that's my question. okay. we're going to pass this law. how does this out? so one example is in keller, texas, the you know that when the school board took over and they decided that one of the things they were going news rather than have librarians be in charge of curating their collections and choosing the books, which i my reporting for this book i had several librarians just walk me through how you're trained, what you learn, and what you do in keller, texas, this far right school board decided, they were going to be in charge. and the new policy was that they would approve every purchase of every book and that it would be 30 days out in the community. and then they would address it. i watched one five and a half hour school board meeting in which at one point a library, a middle school library stood up, walked to the podium. and i just, you know, librarians are ju
she florida, pennsylvania, sylvania, new hampshire. and i have my approach as a journalist is. i've continued to write about this. and my strategy is really pass this law. what are the consequences? what are the. that's my question. okay. we're going to pass this law. how does this out? so one example is in keller, texas, the you know that when the school board took over and they decided that one of the things they were going news rather than have librarians be in charge of curating their...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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a month later, the gate city guard left service in florida, where the confederates plan to surround, if not capture a u.s. military installations, including fort pickens, pensacola, the atlanta and the trout hotel. two of the main hotels in the city were with excitement as thousands of atlantans cheered and, gathered celebrations, the rebels, as they went off to war. the city was ready to support white southern nationalism with force. in 1861, scores of cities from hapeville, maine, to quincy, illinois, including more than a dozen southern, were more populist than atlanta. despite a small, small population atlanta was an important cog in the confederate war machine. by 1863, the york times reported that the city was an important network, quote, furnished and it furnished half of war material to entire confederacy from the rappahannock to the rio grande, unquote, that the war was in. its third year surprised many people and people on both sides that the war would have been over by then. so so at point, the new york times is very clear that. atlanta is important to the machine. and i w
a month later, the gate city guard left service in florida, where the confederates plan to surround, if not capture a u.s. military installations, including fort pickens, pensacola, the atlanta and the trout hotel. two of the main hotels in the city were with excitement as thousands of atlantans cheered and, gathered celebrations, the rebels, as they went off to war. the city was ready to support white southern nationalism with force. in 1861, scores of cities from hapeville, maine, to quincy,...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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and read what they wish, free from government censorship, but a nationwide campaign in states like florida, utah, north dakota, and even california has been deployed to limit our children's learning and enforce restrictions on one of our most fundamental freedoms. right now extremist politicians are working overtime to strip our nation's book shelves of essential literature that help to tell the complete story of america, including the stories of great sacrifice, contribution, and pain of black americans. these include stories of struggle and triumph against hatred and bigotry. they recount efforts to reconcile the promise of american ideals with the reality of our most pervasive challenges a authors who have long been criticized -- been recognized as chronicles of our nation's journey has been written off by lawmakers who seek to narrow the scope of what our children can learn about our history. now the organizers of these state-by-state battles would have you believe that they are upholding parents' choice, that imposing these book bans would somehow protect the innocence of our children
and read what they wish, free from government censorship, but a nationwide campaign in states like florida, utah, north dakota, and even california has been deployed to limit our children's learning and enforce restrictions on one of our most fundamental freedoms. right now extremist politicians are working overtime to strip our nation's book shelves of essential literature that help to tell the complete story of america, including the stories of great sacrifice, contribution, and pain of black...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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well, we can't go and spend money on latino in florida. we got to do that. we have to make sure we have puerto rican eyes and there's cubans and there's all these different i'm-i do the gop is not doing that okay, we're going down and they're hitting latino file and they're telling them democrats are socialists that want to turn your male children into girls or something to effect. okay. and the ones that they're keeping on the rolls and what if we were? it would be one thing if we were also contact doing already 80% of the latinos in florida. but here's the thing we're not even talking to them like we don't have the money or the strategy or the tactics deployed to get even one message in one version of spanish. they're so like, let's do that first. and then we can we can we can make it more fancy later. but i think we we really have to stop at this cemetery and make sure that voters at least one message from us, especially in these poor constituencies, black people. right. the black voter electorate is going suffer so much under this dictatorship, i mean, m
well, we can't go and spend money on latino in florida. we got to do that. we have to make sure we have puerto rican eyes and there's cubans and there's all these different i'm-i do the gop is not doing that okay, we're going down and they're hitting latino file and they're telling them democrats are socialists that want to turn your male children into girls or something to effect. okay. and the ones that they're keeping on the rolls and what if we were? it would be one thing if we were also...
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Mar 23, 2024
03/24
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brothers and sisters, please help me represent -- well come representative maxwell frost of florida. the youngest member of congress, and showing the kind of staying power that someday may make him the dean of the congress. he's been a fighter for social security. speaking on afge for members, and on the oversight committee, he stands up every day against untruthful allegations by the majority. please welcome representative maxwell frost. >> thank you. how is everybody doing? what's disgusting? unionbusting. what's going on here? am i at the right rally? what's disgusting? >> unionbusting! >> hello, afge. it's a blessing to be here this morning. thank god it's not raining. this year, it's not raining and i want to first off thank you all so much for doing your jobs and doing a damn good job at that. and now we need congress to do the same, we need congress to do their jobs. we got this week, then we go home for a week, three more days, and then the government shuts down. i had heard zip from my republican colleagues on the plan from last week on how we will make sure you all stay in
brothers and sisters, please help me represent -- well come representative maxwell frost of florida. the youngest member of congress, and showing the kind of staying power that someday may make him the dean of the congress. he's been a fighter for social security. speaking on afge for members, and on the oversight committee, he stands up every day against untruthful allegations by the majority. please welcome representative maxwell frost. >> thank you. how is everybody doing? what's...
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Mar 23, 2024
03/24
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and the debacle down in florida with the hanging chads and all of that. and the response to make sure that never happened again was to move toward electron i think voting and touch screen machines went up all over the country. i was managing a campaign in florida in 2022. the first statewide election after 2000. and the election administrators hadn't thought about simple things, they used all the same locations but hadn't thought about, were there enough outlets. so the polls had to open late. but we moved toward electron i think voting because of an erosion of trust in the old system. now there's a rapid move toward making sure there's a paper trail. right? because people have last -- so i think it's a fascinating question and a fascinating idea but will we always kind of teeter back and forth when it comes to which system we trust? is there a way to sort of alleviate those concerns that people just tend to have about the process? brad: perhaps. because if we ever reach the day when we can trust 100% of all politician, i don't know if you can trust 100%
and the debacle down in florida with the hanging chads and all of that. and the response to make sure that never happened again was to move toward electron i think voting and touch screen machines went up all over the country. i was managing a campaign in florida in 2022. the first statewide election after 2000. and the election administrators hadn't thought about simple things, they used all the same locations but hadn't thought about, were there enough outlets. so the polls had to open late....