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Apr 7, 2024
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and mississippi. by listening to these accounts and noticing these details, we understand not only mississippi's racial past, but the voices and deeds that resisted and fought back to create more just state, region and country. historian robin d.g. kelley sums up the emmett till generation in this way. the emmett till case a spark for a new generation to commit their lives to social change. they said, we're not going to die like this. instead, we're going to live and transform the south so people won't have to die like this. and if anything, if any events of the 1950s inspired young people to be committed to that kind of change, it was the lynching of emmett till. after seeing till's corpse, the young activist of the emmett till generation decided that enough was enough because they understood if they did not fight for societal change, they could be the victims of violence to mamie till-mobley orchestration and introduce young black people to a level of racial hatred that many did not know. black chil
and mississippi. by listening to these accounts and noticing these details, we understand not only mississippi's racial past, but the voices and deeds that resisted and fought back to create more just state, region and country. historian robin d.g. kelley sums up the emmett till generation in this way. the emmett till case a spark for a new generation to commit their lives to social change. they said, we're not going to die like this. instead, we're going to live and transform the south so...
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Apr 20, 2024
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will never be last again. >> mississippi has been so far down on so many measures. and this is one of the reasons we're trying to look back on something that was truly awful people trying to own other people. and that's the reason the confederate states seceded. all you have to do is read their articles of succession and i did the rapid let me read the first couple of lines from mississippi's justification for its accession. >> this is january 9, 18, 60 one our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery, the greatest material interest of the world. it's labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce on, of the earth. these products are peculiar to the climate verging on the tropical regions and by an imperious law of nature none but the black rais conveyor exposure to the tropical sun. i mean, this is what the governor of, of mississippi says, that there should be some time to honore those who fought for it and reflect on from the lessons what lessons should we take from this moment, gov
will never be last again. >> mississippi has been so far down on so many measures. and this is one of the reasons we're trying to look back on something that was truly awful people trying to own other people. and that's the reason the confederate states seceded. all you have to do is read their articles of succession and i did the rapid let me read the first couple of lines from mississippi's justification for its accession. >> this is january 9, 18, 60 one our position is...
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Apr 11, 2024
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. >> este preocupada por nuestros vecinos en luisiana y mississippi y alabama. lidia: equipos de emergencia peinan la zona afectada por otro tornado aparente. donde hay daÑos extensos, segÚn las autoridades, mientras que mississippi lÍderes estatales advierten de la posible de torbellinos y aquel pronostican fuertes rÁfagas de viento en la regiÓn. >> cuando vi afro de mi casa, habÍa que habÍa remolinos y el viento era muy fuerte. nunca pensÉ que esto podrÍa ocurrir cerca de mi casa. lidia: estas condicionespara desplazarse por la florida rumbo al norte de la costa este. a pesar de las advertencias por tiempo severo en la regiÓn como las alertas por la posible a de tornados esto vigentes. elian: mississippi puede los estados mÁs golpeados que se reportÓ al menos una muerte, los expertos las viernes a la poblaciÓn que se preparen para vientos huracanados. maity: tras la firma de la gobernadora, iowa aprobÓ una ley para arrestar y deportar aquellos inmigrantes que ingresen al estado luego de ser deportados, nuestra compaÑera viviana Ávila nos explic
. >> este preocupada por nuestros vecinos en luisiana y mississippi y alabama. lidia: equipos de emergencia peinan la zona afectada por otro tornado aparente. donde hay daÑos extensos, segÚn las autoridades, mientras que mississippi lÍderes estatales advierten de la posible de torbellinos y aquel pronostican fuertes rÁfagas de viento en la regiÓn. >> cuando vi afro de mi casa, habÍa que habÍa remolinos y el viento era muy fuerte. nunca pensÉ que esto podrÍa ocurrir cerca de...
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Apr 3, 2024
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right there in the room. >> it looks like-- so those mississippi state grads, i represented mississippi state. most of you may not know this, mississippi has more super computing capability than anyplace in the south. georgia, florida -- mississippi has two of them, the development and research center and then the space center. earlier today, we announced incompas is founding and establishing, creating a center for ai public policy and responsibility. how do we bring the benefits of ai to places like tennessee and mississippi and how do we use our research, universities and our federal research centers and labs like at oak ridge-- >> and oak ridge is where we have the summit, which is the world's fastest computer, and we like having that capability there, and we have been doing round tables in tennessee quantum and on ai. senator coons and i-- and you'll hear from senator klobuchar, the no fakes bill, ai in protection of our entertainment community to protect the name, image, likeness and voice. so that's kind of the first bill out of the box, but in tennessee, i say we have the good, b
right there in the room. >> it looks like-- so those mississippi state grads, i represented mississippi state. most of you may not know this, mississippi has more super computing capability than anyplace in the south. georgia, florida -- mississippi has two of them, the development and research center and then the space center. earlier today, we announced incompas is founding and establishing, creating a center for ai public policy and responsibility. how do we bring the benefits of ai to...
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Apr 11, 2024
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. >> louisiana, mississippi. >> 30 millones de personas sienten su impacto. >> al menos una persona ha m muerto. >> los precios. >> la inflacion sube otra vez y mas de lo esperado. >> se siente en la gasolina, en la vivienda y en algunos alimentos. >> ¿tendra esto un impacto en la contienda por la presidencia de estados unidos? >> ¿cierto? >> un migrante ecuatoriano e ecuatoriano rescata a un bebe en la selva del darien y en el camino lo entrega a la unicef. >> yo dije, si le dejo aqui al bebe, al nino, no la va a li librar. >> hoy, el mismo nos cuenta la historia y muestra su rostro para que el pequeno se ree reencuentre con su impacto. >> al menos una persona ha m muerto. >> la inflacion sube otra vez y mas de lo esperado. >> se siente en en algunos la unidos? >> al va a librar. >> y el adulterio en nueva york es un de eliteo. >> un de eliteo. >> se castiga con hasta tres meses de prision y 500 dolares de multa pero un grupo de legisladores quiere terminar con esta norma norma. >> buenas vaqueiro. >> lluvia queiro. >> buenas tardes, comenzamos con informacion de de personas en el s
. >> louisiana, mississippi. >> 30 millones de personas sienten su impacto. >> al menos una persona ha m muerto. >> los precios. >> la inflacion sube otra vez y mas de lo esperado. >> se siente en la gasolina, en la vivienda y en algunos alimentos. >> ¿tendra esto un impacto en la contienda por la presidencia de estados unidos? >> ¿cierto? >> un migrante ecuatoriano e ecuatoriano rescata a un bebe en la selva del darien y en el camino lo...
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Apr 10, 2024
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this is mississippi. this has never happened in mississippi justice has come in mississippi >> never before has this happenedn rankin county, the attorney says thatever h is hapned in mississippi. were all oicers have bee charged and problem prosecuted and now facing real time. we were inside the courtroom where these men used to work every now and then. d they actually had to bring state troopers in to be the court security today. one of the this that stood outo me he h i actually taedo daniel up dikes attorney, d he says s client felt so bad about this. he'actually the one who turned or the text messas case. there's a lot of people coming and the federal ar because you have a sheriff's department that is still operating by the way, bryan bailey the sheriff, says he's not stepping down and he says he had no idea that y of this was gog on >> there's some serious there are some serious questions from the community about that because this was an orchestrated coordinated group how could the sheriff not know
this is mississippi. this has never happened in mississippi justice has come in mississippi >> never before has this happenedn rankin county, the attorney says thatever h is hapned in mississippi. were all oicers have bee charged and problem prosecuted and now facing real time. we were inside the courtroom where these men used to work every now and then. d they actually had to bring state troopers in to be the court security today. one of the this that stood outo me he h i actually taedo...
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Apr 2, 2024
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so arkansas, tennessee, louisiana and mississippi. it does take into account the border states of missouri and kentucky as necessary in order to understand what's going on in area. but they're not essential to the story. i should also note that i'm focusing on plantation and slavery areas of this region. and i'm taking you know, tennessee is a is a weirdly configured state. right. but it's west tennessee that's really part of the of the plantation slavery society, though. it is to look at the state level developments. okay. and so what i'm trying to do in this book is to bring into a coherent narrative the military story, the major political developments, particularly in louisiana, tennessee and arkansas. there's never really a unionist movement per say in mississippi and then also in washington, d.c., and with the national. and then it's also incorporate the great work that that has been done on basically the on the ground destruction of slavery by the slaves themselves. and which i've also contributed in part of in my own work to th
so arkansas, tennessee, louisiana and mississippi. it does take into account the border states of missouri and kentucky as necessary in order to understand what's going on in area. but they're not essential to the story. i should also note that i'm focusing on plantation and slavery areas of this region. and i'm taking you know, tennessee is a is a weirdly configured state. right. but it's west tennessee that's really part of the of the plantation slavery society, though. it is to look at the...
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Apr 11, 2024
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mississippi, a sentencias de entr ilia: un tribunal condenÓ seis ex policÍas blancos de mississippi a sentencias de entre 15 a 45 aÑos de cÁrcel por torturar dos hombres afroamericanos, son conocidos como el escuadrÓn de matones, quienes venÍan cumpliendo sentencias en cÁrceles federales. Éstas nuevas condenas no se sumarÁn a las anteriores. un grupo de organizaciones civiles pidiÓ cambiar el nombre del puente francis scott key. el argumento es que fue propietario de esclavos. los promotores de cambios quieren que lleve el nombre de la primera persona negra al llegar a la cÁmara de representantes. jorge: se denuncian posibles riesgos en la fabricaciÓn de un tipo de aviÓn. claudia nos dice cuÁl. claudia: otro informante afirma que los modelos 777 y 787 podrÍan quebrarse tras dÉcadas de uso. las partes del fuselaje de labios no estÁn bien sujetas. >> la informaciÓn recibida es muy seria y debe ser tomada con seriedad, pero tambiÉn con tranquilidad y prudencia por claudia: el medio informante es el ingeniero sell, quien afirma que tomaron atajos para armar sus aviones y
mississippi, a sentencias de entr ilia: un tribunal condenÓ seis ex policÍas blancos de mississippi a sentencias de entre 15 a 45 aÑos de cÁrcel por torturar dos hombres afroamericanos, son conocidos como el escuadrÓn de matones, quienes venÍan cumpliendo sentencias en cÁrceles federales. Éstas nuevas condenas no se sumarÁn a las anteriores. un grupo de organizaciones civiles pidiÓ cambiar el nombre del puente francis scott key. el argumento es que fue propietario de esclavos. los...
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Apr 27, 2024
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. >> y sosorio tiene su testimonio. >> atencion en mississippi, alejandro se comunico con noticias telemundo hemos primer momento. >> heroe detenido en detencion testimonio. >> autoridades del servicio alejandro bueno noticias te telemundo para contarnos que las de inmigracion y control de aduanas lo detuvieron en texas y de ahi lo trasladaron a mississippi. >> no, yo me entregue a mi migracion y ellos me dijeron, ah, ¿que? >> ¿no se activa el fin? >> ok, te van a fin? >> si, yo a ahi esperaste pr proceso esperaba su proceso y capturandose la fila me lo siento yo ahi a alejandro se lo presentamos aqui en noticias telemundo migrante ecuatoriano que el pasado 15 de marzo ayudo al pequeno kehler a sobrevivir los caminos del darien, aunque su gesto fue el de un buen samaritano. >> el destino lo ha sorprendido con una mala jugada. >> solo espera algun dia volver a ver al pequeno keyles. >> la mision es que este bien y si dios permite, esten bien en estados unidos y el tambien llegue, ojala y yo ahi a alejandro se lo presentamos aqui en noticias telemundo en noticias telemundo. >> es el el pasad
. >> y sosorio tiene su testimonio. >> atencion en mississippi, alejandro se comunico con noticias telemundo hemos primer momento. >> heroe detenido en detencion testimonio. >> autoridades del servicio alejandro bueno noticias te telemundo para contarnos que las de inmigracion y control de aduanas lo detuvieron en texas y de ahi lo trasladaron a mississippi. >> no, yo me entregue a mi migracion y ellos me dijeron, ah, ¿que? >> ¿no se activa el fin? >>...
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Apr 11, 2024
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evacuations under way in parts of central mississippi, near a levee that officials fear could break. a difficult night ahead for millions. abc's senior meteorologist rob marciano leading us off in slidell, louisiana. >> reporter: tonight, that deadly severe weather outbreak slamming the gulf coast, cutting a path of destruction across multiple states. >> big tornado, big, big tornado. >> reporter: this tornado striking the city of slidell, louisiana, northeast of new orleans. >> wow! >> reporter: just came up on the scene here in slidell, where a tornado came through. you see first responders here. on the main intersection, all these commercial buildings blown out. that mcdonald's, heavily damaged. and obviously, the rain continues to come down. amyrie gilbert describing the race to shelter when the tornado hit. >> all you hear is, "come on, go, go, go, go, go. run, run, run, run, run." you know, you got people screaming. >> reporter: more than 50 people rescued, some injured at this apartment complex. jennifer rushing to save her son mason. >> i was asleep in my bed, and i woke up t
evacuations under way in parts of central mississippi, near a levee that officials fear could break. a difficult night ahead for millions. abc's senior meteorologist rob marciano leading us off in slidell, louisiana. >> reporter: tonight, that deadly severe weather outbreak slamming the gulf coast, cutting a path of destruction across multiple states. >> big tornado, big, big tornado. >> reporter: this tornado striking the city of slidell, louisiana, northeast of new orleans....
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Apr 10, 2024
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nbc's priya sridhar is outside the courthouse in brandon, mississippi. also with me, former federal prosecutor, professor at georgetown school of law, and msnbc legal analyst, paul butler. walk us through what happened in court today. >> reporter: that's right. well, the deputies themselves were pretty quiet. the federal sentencing actually happened a few days ago, and the six deputies were sentenced to ten to 40-year sentences and in that situation one of the deputies asked if he could address the victims, and the victims said they didn't want to hear from the deputy. today the deputies didn't try to say in court, and the victims spoke, as you mentioned, through their attorney. you can hear a little bit more about what they had to say about what the past year has been like for them. >> the very bad actions of the rankin county goon squad officers severely impacted me and has left a scar on me that will last forever. i never knew the ones that were sworn to protect and serve would be the ones i needed protection from. they beat, kicked, tased, assaulted,
nbc's priya sridhar is outside the courthouse in brandon, mississippi. also with me, former federal prosecutor, professor at georgetown school of law, and msnbc legal analyst, paul butler. walk us through what happened in court today. >> reporter: that's right. well, the deputies themselves were pretty quiet. the federal sentencing actually happened a few days ago, and the six deputies were sentenced to ten to 40-year sentences and in that situation one of the deputies asked if he could...
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Apr 10, 2024
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john and joey, thanks to the great discussion as always, just horrendous case and mississippi. appreciate the way you both handled it. thank you so much. and coming up and other trump associate heading to jail, the sentence for former trump organization cfo alan weisselberg. that's coming up how would really happened sunday, april 28. did nine on cnn >> this looks like an actual ketone >> meanwhile, at a vrbo, when other vacation and rentals aren't what they're cracked up to be. dry one where you know what you'll get >> with priceline vip family, you can unlock deals five times faster. you don't even have to be an actual family. >> i'd be the dad on the day he physically it's clear that i'm the dad. >> okay. so which data is pain? >> your generalized myasthenia gravis made my life a lot harder, but the picture started changing when i started on viv cart >> if guard is for adults with generalized myasthenia gravis who are anti chr antibody positive in a clinical trial, vif guard significantly improved moos participant's ability to do daily activities when added to their current
john and joey, thanks to the great discussion as always, just horrendous case and mississippi. appreciate the way you both handled it. thank you so much. and coming up and other trump associate heading to jail, the sentence for former trump organization cfo alan weisselberg. that's coming up how would really happened sunday, april 28. did nine on cnn >> this looks like an actual ketone >> meanwhile, at a vrbo, when other vacation and rentals aren't what they're cracked up to be. dry...
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Apr 6, 2024
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that was her son because people in mississippi were saying, oh, that that could be any any person. that's not your son. that's any any that you find in the river. and so the reason that she did what was doing is different from what people are saying we need to do today with instances of of mass. right. we're talking about a lady who was operating in this moment in 1955. how many more bodies do we need to see to know that these things happen. right. and so i i'm of weighing with that. i also see that there are differences. and for me, that's what kind of saves that a little bit, that we can speak to the relevant voice of her work and her gesture, but we can also think about what we can do in our own moment, kind of think of our sociopolitical issues today. and with that, i can, you know, distance myself away from, you know, the the mental state of studying horrible event, such as this this this murder. thank you. thank you. it's all the time we have. thank you all so much for coming and making. thank you. thank you go to venture. good afternoon, everyone. please have a seat. good af
that was her son because people in mississippi were saying, oh, that that could be any any person. that's not your son. that's any any that you find in the river. and so the reason that she did what was doing is different from what people are saying we need to do today with instances of of mass. right. we're talking about a lady who was operating in this moment in 1955. how many more bodies do we need to see to know that these things happen. right. and so i i'm of weighing with that. i also see...
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Apr 27, 2024
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so mississippi, we almost there. we didn't make it. we'll keep trying, but it's one of those jim crow laws that is out here in the south that keep a significant number of black people from being voters. >> well, as a preacher, i can say amen to your references to people going to church asking for forgiveness, but you're saying 20% more would be added to the rolls if this passes, 20% more, most of them black. that is mind boggling. >> absolutely. >> that is something to note. thank you for being with us, mr. chairman, congressman bene thompson. joining me now for more on the trump cases is political analyst kimberly at kins stall. thank you for joining us tonight. very busy week of legal proceedings for donald trump. so let's start with his manhattan hush money trial, which was dominated by the testimony of david pecke r former publisher of the national enquirer tabloid, who working with trump and his former fixer michael cohen would buy the right to stories that were unfavorable to trump's 2016 presidential ambitions and then bury them
so mississippi, we almost there. we didn't make it. we'll keep trying, but it's one of those jim crow laws that is out here in the south that keep a significant number of black people from being voters. >> well, as a preacher, i can say amen to your references to people going to church asking for forgiveness, but you're saying 20% more would be added to the rolls if this passes, 20% more, most of them black. that is mind boggling. >> absolutely. >> that is something to note....
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Apr 28, 2024
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mississippi path that you come from. and you spent time in chapter two talking a bit about your father, your relationship to him, someone who you deeply admired. so maybe tell us a little bit about why you opened chapter to a chapter that is in many ways about malcolm x as a hero of yours with a story about your father. you know, i think i learned this lesson from baldwin carlyle that the messiness of the world is actually a reflection of the messiness of our interior lives. and if we're going to change the world, we have to deal with ourselves. we have to deal with the wounds. and, you know, my father is the most important man in my life. he's the most responsible human being i've ever met. but he scared the living daylights out of me. mm hmm. and he deposited a kind of fear in my gut that led me to believe at least in the quiet of night, that i wasn't. i wasn't quite courageous. i was afraid. and i had been trying to prove to myself that i wasn't a coward. and so what you see in the book. right, is in that chapter is m
mississippi path that you come from. and you spent time in chapter two talking a bit about your father, your relationship to him, someone who you deeply admired. so maybe tell us a little bit about why you opened chapter to a chapter that is in many ways about malcolm x as a hero of yours with a story about your father. you know, i think i learned this lesson from baldwin carlyle that the messiness of the world is actually a reflection of the messiness of our interior lives. and if we're going...
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Apr 20, 2024
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bob moses who's the famed leader of mississippi freedom -- mississippi freedom summer, and critical partner or personality in snic, he told me this story when he was at princeton. he said, we were driving the bus to go register to voters in sunflower county. and folks knew what they were driving into. they knew violence awaited them. and this one person back in the bus singing every hymn in the hymnal. just singing. wouldn't stop singing. just would not stop singing. and what is going on here? and then somebody -- somebody mentioned oh, she's trying to fortify the spirit. i understand what she's doing. they didn't know who the woman was. it turned out to be fanny lou haimer. context. leadership emerges. not just simply a sharecropper. not someone who doesn't have education. but someone who's willing to put their body, their mind, their heart, their soul on the line for freedom and justice. khalil: do you think that the way that a lot of advocates, organizers, activists today use the language of people who are closest to the problem are closest to the solution? is it contemporary manifestati
bob moses who's the famed leader of mississippi freedom -- mississippi freedom summer, and critical partner or personality in snic, he told me this story when he was at princeton. he said, we were driving the bus to go register to voters in sunflower county. and folks knew what they were driving into. they knew violence awaited them. and this one person back in the bus singing every hymn in the hymnal. just singing. wouldn't stop singing. just would not stop singing. and what is going on here?...
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Apr 10, 2024
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i mentioned the elections of mississippi today. unfortunately, we did not get an answer before today's election as to whether there was any threat of ballots running out again based on what we learned in the previous election. we are investigating that peer? have people on the ground. that is why we are documenting all of the different incursions on the right to vote that we are finding, so that there is a record that can support the federal legislation that we are here to demand congress pass. the suggestion that there are no modern conditions that should give rise to federal intervention is just patently false. the work we do, along with her civil-rights colleagues, every election on the ground, establishes that record to support federal legislation like the freedom to vote act. >> thank you, miss nelson. mr. allen, i had the pleasure of being down in alabama just a week ago. being on the campus of alabama state university, as a member of this body, conducting a field hearing, in alabama, talking to voters about just that point,
i mentioned the elections of mississippi today. unfortunately, we did not get an answer before today's election as to whether there was any threat of ballots running out again based on what we learned in the previous election. we are investigating that peer? have people on the ground. that is why we are documenting all of the different incursions on the right to vote that we are finding, so that there is a record that can support the federal legislation that we are here to demand congress pass....
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Apr 23, 2024
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host: william in mississippi for our guest, jackson, mississippi. independent line. caller: thank you for taking my call once again. i want to talk about some things that i heard. i don't disagree with too much of what your guest is saying, but i just want to point this out because i know people are listening. when they talk about the black mail loader, don't believe in that malarkey. i am 57 years old now. the people that sit up there and talk about them switching, 85, 90 percent of those people don't vote. either they are locked up, don't vote at all. i have had 10 conversations in the last three years about different things that trump didn't do, things that congress passed, that trump takes credit for. you hit these people with these facts, they say, i never thought about voting. but they try to influence a lot of people that do vote. people, listen to me. when it comes to black people, 85, 90% of people talking about switching over don't vote, never vote, never will. thank you for taking my call. guest: we don't have a measure in this report about intention to vo
host: william in mississippi for our guest, jackson, mississippi. independent line. caller: thank you for taking my call once again. i want to talk about some things that i heard. i don't disagree with too much of what your guest is saying, but i just want to point this out because i know people are listening. when they talk about the black mail loader, don't believe in that malarkey. i am 57 years old now. the people that sit up there and talk about them switching, 85, 90 percent of those...
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Apr 25, 2024
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they reached the mississippi saint louis is becoming a prominent river town. remember that at end of the revolution, the british and, the americans agreed to unimpeded of the mississippi. they would share that river. well, france is on the other side and france is in possession. this territory of louisiana, which basically hugs the mississippi from its headwaters in minnesota to where it discharges in the gulf of mexico, at the city of, new orleans and france wants to get rid of it. it is bogged down in a series of wars. the european continent. france doesn't have the or bureaucratic capacity to continue to administer. louisiana. and so they say to thomas, you want some land? and jefferson says, absolutely, i would love some land. there could be a lot of good stuff out there that this new country could use. there could be a lot of really interesting to be gained from going and exploring this place. all louisiana territory, you, napoleon and all ad 828,000 square miles of territory to the united states doubling in effect in one sort of purchase the entire exten
they reached the mississippi saint louis is becoming a prominent river town. remember that at end of the revolution, the british and, the americans agreed to unimpeded of the mississippi. they would share that river. well, france is on the other side and france is in possession. this territory of louisiana, which basically hugs the mississippi from its headwaters in minnesota to where it discharges in the gulf of mexico, at the city of, new orleans and france wants to get rid of it. it is...
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Apr 16, 2024
04/24
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ALJAZ
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that's a lot of resistance. changes to the course of the mississippi river is climate change. an intense storm that, that a road in the area dan, look, you just can you take of, you can see those canals to see those long straight lines. those are canals that were cut in the mars. those are, yeah, those are canals that have been cut in the bars for, for oil and gas exploration. the state is lost over nearly 5000 square kilometers worth of land over over the last 100 years. you've been under the more optimistic scenario that will be well over a 1000 square kilometers worth of land over the next 50 years. so we're looking at a landscape that is going to remain risking and is going to probably become riskier as a place to live in the me got you to see that i am from black and his parents, louisiana. been there all my life? it's a beautiful place to live, but it's a community that strongly hold on to its roots because of sea level rise close by, you know, the climate change and different things. but mostly we're going out to see like to type tannic. it's down. we don't fund you're
that's a lot of resistance. changes to the course of the mississippi river is climate change. an intense storm that, that a road in the area dan, look, you just can you take of, you can see those canals to see those long straight lines. those are canals that were cut in the mars. those are, yeah, those are canals that have been cut in the bars for, for oil and gas exploration. the state is lost over nearly 5000 square kilometers worth of land over over the last 100 years. you've been under the...
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Apr 10, 2024
04/24
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KNTV
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city uncertain some of these unforgettable of louisiana on into mississippi. this is a very volatile situation. we have 13 million people under flood watches right now and some flood warnings stretching from the panhandle of florida all the way into texas. you can see multi thunderstorms moving up. 13 million people at risk, damaging hail, wind gusts of over 75 miles an hour. here is what we're most concerned about going into tonight. an ef-2 or a stronger tornado risk from just west of tallahassee all the way through central mississippi, alabama on into louisiana including new orleans, lake charles, pensacola as well, alabama. we are going to be watching this very, very closely over the next 24 hours. that's what's going on around the >>> good wednesday morning. i'm meteorologist kari hall. today is going to be warm, up to 80 degrees for the inland valleys and slightly warmer tomorrow, as the sunshine continues. but then by the end of the week, we're going to feel a significant cooldown on friday, off and on rain on saturday, and only 55 degrees. but then as
city uncertain some of these unforgettable of louisiana on into mississippi. this is a very volatile situation. we have 13 million people under flood watches right now and some flood warnings stretching from the panhandle of florida all the way into texas. you can see multi thunderstorms moving up. 13 million people at risk, damaging hail, wind gusts of over 75 miles an hour. here is what we're most concerned about going into tonight. an ef-2 or a stronger tornado risk from just west of...
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Apr 10, 2024
04/24
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CNNW
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i'm jake tapper in this hour, the goon squad faces the music deep down in mississippi. the sentencing for six former police officers convicted of torturing two black men the rulings in the shadow of the rankin county confederate monument right outside the courthouse, plus former major league baseball player in current republican senate candidate steve garvey here i'm the lead from his days on the mound now, making a pitch for politics, taking on congressman adam schiff and a high-profile race for the us senate. and leading this our a conservative revolt holt against speaker mike johnson and a protest vote today was it led by donald trump in the wee hours of the night trump posted in all caps on truth, social, quote, kill fisa. it was illegally used against me and many others. they spied on my campaign he signed off that post with his initials, djt, fisa is the foreign intelligence surveillance act. it allows surveillance on foreign nationals without a warrant. the current law buyers next friday, late this afternoon, 19 house republicans did as trump advised today, votin
i'm jake tapper in this hour, the goon squad faces the music deep down in mississippi. the sentencing for six former police officers convicted of torturing two black men the rulings in the shadow of the rankin county confederate monument right outside the courthouse, plus former major league baseball player in current republican senate candidate steve garvey here i'm the lead from his days on the mound now, making a pitch for politics, taking on congressman adam schiff and a high-profile race...