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Apr 8, 2024
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but first, i need to acknowledge stephen j. pine. if you don't know who stephen j. pine is, he's this man down here in the dapper corduroy jacket and i spent seven years writing about fire. but you cannot write about fire going through stephen j. pine and he is the most prolific and eloquent chronicler of fire, i think probably who ever lived. he's got a shelf about this wide of amazing about fire all over the world and. richly deserved and he happens to be local also so you're lucky and i hope you dial into his work because i certainly have and anyone in this business is standing on his shoulders to some degree so and actually after the fort mcmurray fire which i'll tell you about in a second, steve coined the term the piracy ring age, the age of fire that we appear to be entering and fort mcmurray, you know was a signal to me too in this way. i live in british. fort mcmurray is in alberta. it's the texas of canada. fort mcmurray, if you've never heard of it, 600 miles north of the montana border, deep in the boreal forest. but it's the largest source of foreign oi
but first, i need to acknowledge stephen j. pine. if you don't know who stephen j. pine is, he's this man down here in the dapper corduroy jacket and i spent seven years writing about fire. but you cannot write about fire going through stephen j. pine and he is the most prolific and eloquent chronicler of fire, i think probably who ever lived. he's got a shelf about this wide of amazing about fire all over the world and. richly deserved and he happens to be local also so you're lucky and i hope...
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Apr 20, 2024
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did you say you were related to general stephens? and i know i have related to general tributes to. yes, yeah. i think a civil war. civil war was on meeting more and more disturbed by marriage and blood of civil war generals in the last few weeks. and he was invited by lincoln's people to fall or fall or lincoln and his mother, $5,000 for wounded people. this is a civil war now. it is $25 million. so i wanted to bring as a trophy of generalship is the slavery flag of the south. but then i decided, you know too much. well, thanks. your comments. thank you. it was a beautiful talk. you. my head's still swimming with everything you told, us, you know, still trying to process. but you talked about the the irish can the catholic protestant split among the germans coming in and i. i had always understood that maryland was a catholic colony. but by and large, the land in the east was owned by the protestant side scott, a scots english dutch. and so the german, the catholic germans came, they went to the midwest with this land. and they could get they could get land. but a jesuit, a georget
did you say you were related to general stephens? and i know i have related to general tributes to. yes, yeah. i think a civil war. civil war was on meeting more and more disturbed by marriage and blood of civil war generals in the last few weeks. and he was invited by lincoln's people to fall or fall or lincoln and his mother, $5,000 for wounded people. this is a civil war now. it is $25 million. so i wanted to bring as a trophy of generalship is the slavery flag of the south. but then i...
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Apr 6, 2024
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stephen vladeck through the supreme court and the judicial process. both of them warn us of the consequences of continuing to ignore what is going on. make no mistake. these books are chilling. they reveal the structural weaknesses of our institution, the dangerous behavior of some of our leaders, and bemoan the loss of common values. i want to start by introducing each panel list in a little detail and then each of them how they came to write the books. we are discussing today. then i have questions for them provoked by my reading their wonderful books, and i hope to leave enough time for some from you. so let's begin introductions first. steven levitsky, a professor of government at harvard. he is the coauthor of a book i am sure many of you have read how democracies die, which won numerous prizes. an that book for us to confront the issues we wrestle with on this panel and suggested a framework to go about answering how we fix it. in his newest book, the tyranny of the, he analyzes the authoritarian backlash against the american experiment in multi
stephen vladeck through the supreme court and the judicial process. both of them warn us of the consequences of continuing to ignore what is going on. make no mistake. these books are chilling. they reveal the structural weaknesses of our institution, the dangerous behavior of some of our leaders, and bemoan the loss of common values. i want to start by introducing each panel list in a little detail and then each of them how they came to write the books. we are discussing today. then i have...
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Apr 11, 2024
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sunday on and a number stephen con shares his book allies of land which argue the reality of rural america is different from the way it is often portrayed by politicians and the media. >> one of the things i discovered to my own surprise is a great deal of american automobile manufacturing now takes place in rural areas especially the japanese companies toyota and honda who built these plants in the 70s and 80s not insider in areas but of the oilfield so rural people are not farmers, statistically speaking, much at all, they are factory workers, long-haul truck drivers, doing all these things that are connected to our industrial society. >> the lives of the land on c-span's q and a. you can listen to all our podcasts on our c-span now apps. c-span has been delivering unfiltered congressional coverage for 45 years, here are highlights of key moments. >> although this city was the nation's capital for only a short time, from those early days, the eyes of the world continue. one year ago, the great center of history, enterprise and creativity suffered the greatest of cruelties and showed itse
sunday on and a number stephen con shares his book allies of land which argue the reality of rural america is different from the way it is often portrayed by politicians and the media. >> one of the things i discovered to my own surprise is a great deal of american automobile manufacturing now takes place in rural areas especially the japanese companies toyota and honda who built these plants in the 70s and 80s not insider in areas but of the oilfield so rural people are not farmers,...
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Apr 25, 2024
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so now we have a question from stephen and stephens asking what role, if any, did pat nixon play in civil rights? have concerns were more for women's rights? so that is a civil right. pat was a supporter of that. right. pat also was way ahead of the game in terms of americans with disabilities. and she really did a lot at the white house itself to make it accessible. so there were areas other than the more traditional ways we think about civil rights. she was really more in terms of equal rights and that was where pat nixon fit in. excellent. thank you. all right. now we've got a question from tiffany from atlanta. tiffany asks, could betty ford's dedication to women's rights also be considered civil rights activism? yes, it could. in fact, i you know, i think the hillary clinton speech i know somebody had written the question about why not hillary? know we really associate hillary with human rights in a broader sense. also, eleanor roosevelt, because of the work she did at the un with chairing the committee that created un declaration of human rights. and so, yes, it's definitely a civil
so now we have a question from stephen and stephens asking what role, if any, did pat nixon play in civil rights? have concerns were more for women's rights? so that is a civil right. pat was a supporter of that. right. pat also was way ahead of the game in terms of americans with disabilities. and she really did a lot at the white house itself to make it accessible. so there were areas other than the more traditional ways we think about civil rights. she was really more in terms of equal...
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Apr 24, 2024
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that photograph of no is named stephen long. so again, names on the landscape if you're driving across the west and you think to yourself, hey, what's that named after? probably an army dude, right? and so one thing that long does that's really interesting and it's going to have a significant impact on our understanding of especially the great which we're going to talk about in more detail later is he calls this region that he passes through nebraska and colorado and kansas, the great american desert? and he's saying basically nothing is ever going to grow here. it's not of much value. this middle part of the country, this massive belt of great plains that runs from the canadian border all the way down into north texas is virtually and a remarkable kind of statement. so remember when frederick jackson turner talked about the subsequent stages of american expansion and how it basically skipped that middle, that great plains chunk, because they called it a desert and no one bothered to follow up on that. how did he all the stuff t
that photograph of no is named stephen long. so again, names on the landscape if you're driving across the west and you think to yourself, hey, what's that named after? probably an army dude, right? and so one thing that long does that's really interesting and it's going to have a significant impact on our understanding of especially the great which we're going to talk about in more detail later is he calls this region that he passes through nebraska and colorado and kansas, the great american...
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Apr 22, 2024
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although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then there's gallery, which is really the home for pop culture. they had the biggest nonfiction and memoir of of the fall. last year it was the it was britney spears. so, you know, simon schuster is sort of a home for topical nonfiction, political books, history, serious, serious topics that people are discussing. so there's there's there's a little bit of everything for everybody since you joined random house in 1989, by the way, when you were at brown university, did you want to be in publishing? was that your plan? i did not have a plan. i will say that i was interested in journalism. i was interested in writing and my father, this is true. my father said, you know, there's this guy nam
although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then there's gallery, which is really the home for pop culture. they had the biggest nonfiction and memoir of of the fall....
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Apr 21, 2024
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so the question is about stephen douglass, lincoln's great opponents in illinois. well, i mean, lincoln thought that i mean, douglass thought that lincoln was a nobody right up until he won the election 1860. they certainly didn't see themselves as equals. yeah. i mean, douglass douglass is an absolutely fascinating figure to understand in terms of the coming of the civil war. right. so he of course, i mean, i sketched out there for sort of big groups of known this. now, douglass, the most of the time in the 1850s is closest to the buchanan position, of course. right. so he is he is all i mean, douglass tried to take the line, and this is partly what's exposed in the lincoln-douglas debates in 1858. douglass is trying to take the line that slavery is just another issue which needs to be in and can only be compromise has to be compromise in order for the union to stay together, which is the greatest moral good, lincoln's line, of course, is that is that slavery is this insidious threat to the union and that a house divided against itself cannot stand. and we must, i
so the question is about stephen douglass, lincoln's great opponents in illinois. well, i mean, lincoln thought that i mean, douglass thought that lincoln was a nobody right up until he won the election 1860. they certainly didn't see themselves as equals. yeah. i mean, douglass douglass is an absolutely fascinating figure to understand in terms of the coming of the civil war. right. so he of course, i mean, i sketched out there for sort of big groups of known this. now, douglass, the most of...
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Apr 1, 2024
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although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then there's gallery, which is really the home for pop culture. they had the biggest nonfiction and memoir of of the fall. last year it was the it was britney spears. so, you know, simon schuster is sort of a home for topical nonfiction, political books, history, serious, serious topics that people are discussing. so there's there's there's a little bit of everything for everybody since you joined random house in 1989, by the way, when you were at brown university, did you want to be in publishing? was that your plan? i did not have a plan. i will say that i was interested in journalism. i was interested in writing and my father, this is true. my father said, you know, there's this guy nam
although we cannot see jennifer egan and and don delillo and stephen king. so a wide range of authors and a wide range of imprints. the idea is that you want to have people who have a certain sensibility for a certain kind of book, and atria right now is really the home for really big commercial fiction. they publish colleen hoover and frederick bachman and sister soldier. then there's gallery, which is really the home for pop culture. they had the biggest nonfiction and memoir of of the fall....
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Apr 15, 2024
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stephen miller in 2021, 2021 start a 501(c)(3) organization the senate may have missed almost every asian american and the me. thery thing said asians need not apply and is about affirmative action. the mailer said that this percentage of black people are league colleges at this percentage of patients are being rejected standup against raisins. it said really big like it made up in workstation name that claim to be on from an asian-american or position but it was really something by stephen moore from the white house. i think that stuff is successful if you can, if you can pick some of these committees against each other. democrats and progressives need for how to make arguments about solidarity, about multiracial democracy, rent civil rights of all communities that create a collective interest and not just hit self interest against each other make it a zero-sum game between communities. i don't think many committees have figured that out, army activists or party strategists have figured that out. >> does someone have a closing question? >> yeah, i do, one quick question. right before we
stephen miller in 2021, 2021 start a 501(c)(3) organization the senate may have missed almost every asian american and the me. thery thing said asians need not apply and is about affirmative action. the mailer said that this percentage of black people are league colleges at this percentage of patients are being rejected standup against raisins. it said really big like it made up in workstation name that claim to be on from an asian-american or position but it was really something by stephen...
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Apr 20, 2024
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stephen miller in 2021 started 85o1c3 organization that sent out my list almost every asian american in the country, including me. this percentage of black people are getting into ivy league colleges the percentage of asians or bank rejected stand up against racism it was said really big. made up an organization same claim to be from asian-american organization but is funded. that stuff is successful thing to have arguments about racial democracy civil rights of all communities that create not just pit self-interest against each other make a zero-sum game. not many figured it out. >> a closing question? >> one quick question part right before us or the q&a we were talking with the white house focusing on voters over 65 but their efforts there. could you talk a little bit more about that demographic and how it compares to young voters specifically in terms of turnout, size, persuade ability? are there issues that are helpful for the white house for one of those groups would you make of that strategy. older noncollege educated. they switch sides. they basically gone the opposite direct
stephen miller in 2021 started 85o1c3 organization that sent out my list almost every asian american in the country, including me. this percentage of black people are getting into ivy league colleges the percentage of asians or bank rejected stand up against racism it was said really big. made up an organization same claim to be from asian-american organization but is funded. that stuff is successful thing to have arguments about racial democracy civil rights of all communities that create not...
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Apr 1, 2024
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perilous fight overcoming our cultures war on the american family and retired supreme court justice stephen breyer has a new book out as well. justice breyer, who's written over ten books already titled his newest reading the constitution why i chose pragmatism, not textualism. and speaking of the supreme court college professor christine blasey ford recalls her decision to testify before congress during the 2018 nomination hearings for justice brett kavanaugh. her new book is called one way back, a memoir. and also just out harvard professor henry louis gates latest book is about the effort by african-american writers from frederick douglass to james baldwin to write and define the black experience. its titled the black box writing the race. and one more new book that's out, we want to tell you about, lawyer and retired harvard law professor alan dershowitz. his latest is called war on woke. why the new mccarthyism is more dangerous than the old. and this is about books, a programing podcast produced by c-span's book tv. in this episode, we're looking at some of the new books that are comi
perilous fight overcoming our cultures war on the american family and retired supreme court justice stephen breyer has a new book out as well. justice breyer, who's written over ten books already titled his newest reading the constitution why i chose pragmatism, not textualism. and speaking of the supreme court college professor christine blasey ford recalls her decision to testify before congress during the 2018 nomination hearings for justice brett kavanaugh. her new book is called one way...
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Apr 7, 2024
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a survey presidential misconduct originally by stephen woodward during the nixon impeachment inquiry in 1974 with a dozen historians contributing individual chapters each president. one of these historians, james banner, edited an updated version of that study in 2019. he said to write the history of presidencies through misconduct is completely to misconstrue the nature of presidencies. so let's take harry truman's presidency as an. truman's presidency, one of the most corrupt in the 20th century. banner continued that the real story of that presidency consisted of policy issues such as the berlin airlift and the marshall plan and quote if you try to write history of the truman administration on the grounds of the misconduct of, the white house, then you're not really writing the history of the truman administration. at one point, a strong ideological skew among historian as against ronald reagan almost did him in. amid the disclosure of the iran-contra affair in 1988 american heritage ran an article by irwin friedman that put reagan in the same category as grant harding and nixon,
a survey presidential misconduct originally by stephen woodward during the nixon impeachment inquiry in 1974 with a dozen historians contributing individual chapters each president. one of these historians, james banner, edited an updated version of that study in 2019. he said to write the history of presidencies through misconduct is completely to misconstrue the nature of presidencies. so let's take harry truman's presidency as an. truman's presidency, one of the most corrupt in the 20th...
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Apr 5, 2024
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and then, you know, this guy who runs this huge pentecostal, charismatic outlet, stephen strang, who's like very disturbed as he's looking at michael flynn, is this is a former national security adviser for trump his his reawakening tour saying, oh, this is way over the top all you know all these things that people are saying, you know, it's it's it's little bit problematic. but they don't say these things in public. they don't say these things to their people. i don't know if it's because you were in atlantic and maybe they just like that kind of power and access i don't know. i'd be curious what you think what it was really fascinating to me how some of these people actually kind of maybe off it's too hard of a word but at least offered a little bit of nuance. well, you're exactly right. and this is i would say one of the thematic undertones of the of the book, which is that a lot of these people in positions, leadership and influence they know. right. yeah, they do in a lot of these exchange things that you're describing there almost, winking and nodding at me a little bit to say li
and then, you know, this guy who runs this huge pentecostal, charismatic outlet, stephen strang, who's like very disturbed as he's looking at michael flynn, is this is a former national security adviser for trump his his reawakening tour saying, oh, this is way over the top all you know all these things that people are saying, you know, it's it's it's little bit problematic. but they don't say these things in public. they don't say these things to their people. i don't know if it's because you...
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Apr 28, 2024
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only not participants in the slave economy but they were jacksonian democrats not to be confused with stephen douglas, pro-slavery democrat of the 1860 election, jacksonian democrats harkened back to andrew comment in 1842, john c calhoun run the union, sir, must be preserved their core principle. was that the constitutional union was too sacred a thing to be broken up over the issue of slavery, not to dwell too long on history. but the thing i should about my family. one birmingham did not exist at the time of the civil war and is pretty much devoid of the normal civil war statues and so forth. in addition, i was born into family on both my father and mother side. that was of confederate nostalgia. i never saw in any of our homes in family or extended family, many aunts and uncles, a single of jefferson davis or robert e lee, and it took me many years starting at a very young age, to figure out why was. mm hmm. yeah. so your family were republicans from reconstruction down to nixon, if i'm not mistaken? yeah. what does it mean? be a republican in the old and not a democrat. well, in. in alab
only not participants in the slave economy but they were jacksonian democrats not to be confused with stephen douglas, pro-slavery democrat of the 1860 election, jacksonian democrats harkened back to andrew comment in 1842, john c calhoun run the union, sir, must be preserved their core principle. was that the constitutional union was too sacred a thing to be broken up over the issue of slavery, not to dwell too long on history. but the thing i should about my family. one birmingham did not...
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Apr 8, 2024
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so our third panelist this morning is stephen vladeck who is the charles allen wright chair in federal courts at the university of texas law school, a nationally that i know. that's okay. okay. texas longhorn. well, this is going to take long time. so he's nationally recognized expert on federal courts, constitutional law national security law and military justice and is currently hosting a podcast on national security law. but hidden from his public. and i talked to him this morning about, this is one of my favorite podcasts that he and his wife co-hosted in loco parentis, which only ran for two seasons during the pandemic about parenting and the law and parenting comes first and you can go and look at past or listen to past sessions of this podcast. i also i asked if steve would you know reprise this podcast because their repartee in the podcast is fabulous interviewing with different people about parenting and and being lawyers and whatnot. it's just fantastic. anyway, he lives in austin with his wife karen, and two daughters and their ten year old pug, who also has not bidden any s
so our third panelist this morning is stephen vladeck who is the charles allen wright chair in federal courts at the university of texas law school, a nationally that i know. that's okay. okay. texas longhorn. well, this is going to take long time. so he's nationally recognized expert on federal courts, constitutional law national security law and military justice and is currently hosting a podcast on national security law. but hidden from his public. and i talked to him this morning about,...
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Apr 15, 2024
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stephen kirkham i want to sort of piggyback on that because you mentioned it's a wonderful life which is actually about a good little banker and, a bad big banker. and so i wonder about the role of little banks. you're actually scaring me now talking about one big bank and then trump gets elected and runs the big bank. no, i like the idea of a lot of little banks right behind julie. it says locally owned, independently run. so this is another trend or at least slogan that people on the left like to use. and my experience little banks has been that they've me everything that i've wanted i need any big banks. what there an advantage to having big banks is there a disadvantage to having small banks why are people opening accounts at wells fargo when they're criminals as i don't really understand what what the role should be little banks. well think i agree with what you're saying about little banks that community banks little banks that members of a community can know their banker they maybe even serve on a public related to their bank, a board of state of stakeholders. and so that's why
stephen kirkham i want to sort of piggyback on that because you mentioned it's a wonderful life which is actually about a good little banker and, a bad big banker. and so i wonder about the role of little banks. you're actually scaring me now talking about one big bank and then trump gets elected and runs the big bank. no, i like the idea of a lot of little banks right behind julie. it says locally owned, independently run. so this is another trend or at least slogan that people on the left...
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Apr 25, 2024
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now increase to five members by ed in john from new york and stephen hopkin from rhode island. recognize last name, nepotism was alive and well. the first fleet, admiral hopkins, was a brother of the congressman. they met on second story room of this building you see depicted on the slide that is ton tavern, which is commonly accepted the birthplace of the united states marines today. in fact i was sharing with dr. brooks how that building no longer in philadelphia. there's just a historical marker on the site where it but there are gentlemen that have purchased land in very close proximity to the original location that are now rebuilt in an exact replica of ton tavern and. hope to have that complete by the 250th anniversary on passamaquoddy advice, congress developed the plan from to conduct a naval campaign to capture the british principal naval base located in halifax, nova scotia. the committee presented its recommendation to the full congress on the 9th of november, and the following day congress resolved. i quote that two battalions of marines be raised, that they be dist
now increase to five members by ed in john from new york and stephen hopkin from rhode island. recognize last name, nepotism was alive and well. the first fleet, admiral hopkins, was a brother of the congressman. they met on second story room of this building you see depicted on the slide that is ton tavern, which is commonly accepted the birthplace of the united states marines today. in fact i was sharing with dr. brooks how that building no longer in philadelphia. there's just a historical...
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Apr 19, 2024
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my name is stephen. i am also a trial lawyer in new york. i have a comment and a question for the professor. i agree with you, professor and responding to the caller who questioned whether our system is the best. i think that there is no other way because when you compare it to other countries in the world, where they have no jurors, but the government for very partial bias justice making decisions, that is much worse. my second comment is a question. you mentioned that you pick a juror in a case when you were a public defender in washington, d.c. who were birkenstocks presuming as a public defender you thought that that person would be liberal. you did not give a response as to whether you and the other lawyer were satisfied. i am wondering if that juror divide your expectations that she would be liberal in favor of your client who you are defending. >> absolutely. great question. as the caller knows, who is a fellow trial lawyer, we only tell stories about cases we win. that juror was very good. they ended up being the foreperson of the ju
my name is stephen. i am also a trial lawyer in new york. i have a comment and a question for the professor. i agree with you, professor and responding to the caller who questioned whether our system is the best. i think that there is no other way because when you compare it to other countries in the world, where they have no jurors, but the government for very partial bias justice making decisions, that is much worse. my second comment is a question. you mentioned that you pick a juror in a...
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Apr 1, 2024
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in this tome, the state of black progress economist stephen moore and former cure senior policy raheem williams. take deep look into our nation's social security and they discuss reform options that could potentially increase black wealth opportunities. both argue that we should be working americans. the option to opt out of social security and, divert their payroll taxes into own personal retirement accounts. a big reason for the huge gap between white and black families is the huge stock in ownership of equities between white and black families. according to pew research center. 61% of white families have either direct, indirect ownership in stocks, only 31% of black families do. per the federal reserve, among white americans. age 35 to 54, 65% have at least one retirement account. blacks in same age group only, 44% do. while it is true that median black household income is much lower than medium white household income, meaning that blacks on average have a lot less to save and vest. this is the very reason why, given the option to opt out of social security is so vitally important.
in this tome, the state of black progress economist stephen moore and former cure senior policy raheem williams. take deep look into our nation's social security and they discuss reform options that could potentially increase black wealth opportunities. both argue that we should be working americans. the option to opt out of social security and, divert their payroll taxes into own personal retirement accounts. a big reason for the huge gap between white and black families is the huge stock in...