6 Burst results for "Lincoln Obama"

#digitalsuccess - Social Media Marketing Podcast by TheAngryTeddy.com
"lincoln obama" Discussed on #digitalsuccess - Social Media Marketing Podcast by TheAngryTeddy.com
"On ski-to-ski fewer oscar listed. This past invites can slide it. Abby only of them toy missing should as many anti 'em housebound connive comic cents and can now jesus plume seep start. Improve mikenowak yet. Irritates is for taking this kiss lagging your can. If i- gitai inskeep seen this semantic is loosely beatles in institute which priest byzantine listening closel- hipster schlosser leash sly he democratic By bid cognitive the takes an nfl comment unpredictable. Lincoln obama taking off. Maximum kind of thing unfolding of maximum opening vic and mini welcome. It takes bottle in two uncles team. Had nine game can as he opened. A bafin is detached dozens a hindi snag. It is entitled into again to few missed in the lab is in to locate Finished so In fact lighted the xanthi Geena truly feel intensified comes in the as the ice fluctuation of them lecture in mashed class. These handed with Again on notre leash magnetism atomised fast by does not match in thima Of mine lifting steamers. Maybe it's given the combed assault astigmatism team. As an under set on the to in both india stace bikavich media connecting whoopie staunton. Mix of. i'm not ticket as taking. I'm fast uber link in the facebook on the mountains i'd focused on. Nbc back fest is coming initially amount of big latin alliston of deepak face decant in to these oscar. So i don't feel tank type cameras. Compact abruptly bleak took the team in my anticipation on st midwicket. Gave and in state enter. Stagnant saints are in not abide with kind of hunters to. Your question can't get amicus. Ted in the this podcast of the angry teddy dot com mental abbott onto stood summer. I thank you. Peter of etienne's on the last to at and if we.

Democracy Now! Audio
"lincoln obama" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"The first day of the Obama presidency, he talked about how civil rights activists in the sixties help. Play the foundation for Obama's presidency in order to become president of the United States. You have to be nominated by one of the two political parties. So, the Chrome thing for me was in reflecting back was the 1964 Challenger of the Mississippi, Freedom Democratic party to the National Democratic Convention because that was where the stage was set that allowed this to happen. Because without opening up the national political situation in the country, this wasn't going to happen. And you know, we we could have gotten the right to vote without the opening. Up of the national political party structure. Found the party structure wasn't opened up by getting the right to vote. The party structure was opened up by directly challenging in Mississippi. To be the right of Mississippi to send on an all white delegation, to the 1964 National Democratic Convention and it was Fannie Lou Hamer, and all the people in that delegation that really forced the national Democratic party to open up, you know. And she was, it was that I mean Barack Obama could not be running for president. If he had not been able to secure a party to run for and off the Democratic Party from the time of after the Civil War, right? Until 1964 there were no black delegates to the Democratic party from the south and it was that action more than anything else, which opened up the National Party, struction allowed eventually. What is happening today to happen off? Can you take us from nineteen sixty-four, the voting, the battle for voting and civil rights to what you see happening today to the progress and also off warnings that you have for us or suggestions recommendations. So my main idea and I try to look at this event in through the lens of the evolution in this country song of the idea of who in our country are the people who have constitutional rights and constitutional responsibilities and off the evolution of the expansion of that. And I think the country kind of Moves In Cycles which take roughly around three-quarters of a century. So I look at the time from 1787 until the Civil War as a time in which we had yes, constitutional people mostly white men off but then we had constitutional property, African Americans who were slaves and then we had this a horrendous War, six hundred thousand people Killed during the war and we come out of the war. And Lincoln Obama is rightly looking at Thursday, we get rid of the idea of constitutional property but African Americans. Don't quite become full-fledged, citizens and wage. When we, when Mississippi people all the time was saying, well, we want to be first class citizens and so the implication being that they were second or even third jobs I said, as soon as so the civil rights movement and and here, I have to, I think we have to give credibility to the sit-in movement to the young black students at Birth. Historically black colleges who are really dismantle Jim Crow in the area of its public accommodations with the sit-in movement off. They actually dismantle that aspect of Jim Crow. So then there was this dismantling of it around the right to vote, and what I was talking about earlier, also around the National Party structure, but you know, when I was sitting in the federal district court house I was down in the witness stand and if you remember this was in the spring of 1963 and at that time, President Kennedy was still alive. Bobby Kennedy was Attorney General Marshall is the Assistant Attorney General for civil rights, and John Doe was my lawyer, he was the chief litigator in the field and the judge judge claimed. That was a federal district judge. We had taken hundreds of sharecroppers in Greenwood to register and then subsequently the snake field secretaries. Had been arrested and Burke a dog. It says we moved to the federal court so just Clayton looks over and he wants to know why are we taking illiterates down to register to vote off? So in a nutshell I answer is well the country can have its cake and eat it too. It can have denied a whole people access to literacy through its political arrangements and then turn around and say well you can't access politics because your illiterate and we won that struggle. We wanted in the courts and it was judged. Wisdom that decision in the case of us. V Louisiana, where he said well we can't allow the state of Louisiana to have authority over the actual qualifications of voting that has to be moved to the federal system. So the nineteen sixty five Voting Rights Act gave the phone number Will government the responsibility of saying who could qualify for the right to vote. So but we didn't win the issue of literacy and I think that's the issue, the band in this evolution of, who are the Constitutional people. The children of our country. Do not have a constitutional right to a public school education and you have to look at the Rodriguez case, 1971 Mexican Americans who sued in Texas for Equity. Their case went all the way up to Josephine Court. And the Supreme Court said you don't you can't come here into the federal system for Relief because there's no substance of federal wrong to a constitutional. Right to an education, public school education in this country. I think really that in our country and this is going to be a huge challenge for the wage. Last Albom Administration in our country. I think we run, sharecrop, education. That is an education that you can trace. When the judge asked that question because in the Delta of Mississippi sharecroppers were signed to do a certain kind of work. And so the idea was you only need a certain kind of education so often, if we carry that forward into the information age, then we will have service in our cities. Just like we had service in the Delta of Mississippi in the Industrial Age. And this is the huge challenge facing our country. I think, what we need is a movement for our constitutional rights, we need a constitutional amendment something, which simply says every child in the country, is a child of the country, and is entitled to a quality public school education. That's civil rights leader. Bob, Moses former field secretary for years. Nick, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and founder of the algebra project. He's died in Florida at the age of 86 to see our interview with him on Obama's, first inauguration along Alice Walker. Go to democracynow.org. I'm Amy Goodman, thanks for joining us..

Democracy Now! Audio
"lincoln obama" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Bob Moses on the first day of the Obama presidency. He talked about how civil rights activists in the 60s helped lay the foundation for Obama's presidency. In order to become president of the United States you have to be nominated by one of the two political parties. So the crucial thing for me was in reflecting back was the 1964 challenge of the Mississippi freedom Democratic Party to the national democratic convention. Because that was where the stage was set that allowed this to happen because without opening up the national political structure in the country this wasn't going to happen. And you know we could have gotten the right to vote without the opening up of the national political party structure. And the party structure wasn't opened up. By getting the right to vote. The party structure was opened up by directly challenging in Mississippi the right of Mississippi to send an all white delegation to the 1964 national Democrat convention. And it was Fannie Lou hamer and all the people in that delegation that really forced the national Democratic Party to open up you know. And it was it was that. I mean Barack Obama could not be running for president if he had not been able to secure a party to run for. And. The Democratic Party from the time of after the Civil War right until 1964. There were no black delegates to the Democratic Party from the south. And it was that action more than anything else which opened up the national party structure allowed eventually what is happening today to happen. Can you take us from 1964 the voting battle for voting and civil rights? To what you see happening today to the progress and also warnings that you have for us or suggestions recommendations. So my main. Idea I try to look at this event in through the lens of the evolution in this country of the idea who in our country are the people who have constitutional rights and constitutional responsibilities. And the evolution of the expansion of that. And I think the country kind of moves in cycles which take a roughly around three quarters of a century. So I look at the time from 1787 until the Civil War as a time in which we had yes constitutional people mostly white men but then we had constitutional property African Americans who were slaves. And then we had this. Horrendous war 600,000 people. Killed during the war. And we come out of the war and Lincoln Obama is rightly. Looking at. We get rid of the idea of constitutional property but African Americans don't quite become full fledged citizens. And when we win Mississippi people all the time was saying well we want to be first class citizens. And so the implication being that they were second or even third class citizens. So the civil rights movement and here I have to I think we have to give credibility to the sit in movement to the young black students at the historically black colleges who really dismantled Jim Crow in the area of its public accommodations with the sit in movement. They actually dismantle that aspect of Jim Crow. So then there was this dismantling of it around the right to vote. And what I was talking about earlier also around the national party structure. But you know when I was sitting in the federal district courthouse I was. In the witness stand. And if you remember this was in the spring of 1963 and at that time president Kennedy was still alive Bobby Kennedy was attorney general Burke Marshall as the assistant attorney general for civil rights. And John Doe was my lawyer. He was the chief litigator in the field. And the judge judge Clayton was a federal district judge. We had taken hundreds of sharecroppers in Greenwood to register and then subsequently the snake field secretary had been arrested. And Burke had our cases removed to the federal courts. So dense Clayton looks over and he wants to know why are we taking illiterates down to register to vote? And so in a nutshell I answer is well the country can't have its cake and eat it too. It can have denied. A whole people access to literacy through its political arrangements. And then turn around and say well you can't access politics because you're illiterate. And we won that struggle. We wanted in the courts and it was judge wisdom's decision in the case of U.S. V Louisiana where he said well we can't allow the state of Louisiana to have authority over the actual qualifications of voting that has to be moved to the federal system. So the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Gave the federal government the responsibility of saying who could qualify for the right to vote. So but we didn't win the issue of illiteracy. And I think that's the issue that in this evolution of who are the constitutional people. The children of our country do not have a constitutional right to a public school education. And you have to look at the Rodriguez case 1971. Mexican Americans who sued in Texas for equity their case went all the way up to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court said you can't come here into the federal system for relief because there's no substantive federal. Constitutional right? To an public school education in this country. I think really that in our country and this is going to be a huge challenge for the Barack Obama administration. In our country I think we run sharecropper education. That is an education that you can trace when the judge asks me that question because in the delta Mississippi sharecroppers were signed to do a certain kind of work. And so the idea was you only need a certain kind of education. So if we carry that forward into the information age then we will have serfs in our cities just like we had in the delta Mississippi in the industrial era. And this is the huge challenge facing our country. I think what we need is a movement for our constitutional right? We need a constitutional amendment something which simply says every child in the country is a child of the country and is entitled to a quality public school education. That's civil rights leader bob Moses former field secretary for snick the student nonviolent coordinating committee and founder of the algebra project. He's died in Florida at the age of 86. To see our interview with him on Obama's first inauguration along with Alice Walker go to democracy now dot org I'm Amy Goodman thanks for joining us..

Democracy Now! Audio
"lincoln obama" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Talked about how civil rights activists in the sixties help. Play the foundation for Obama's presidency in order to become president of the United States. You have to be nominated by one of the two political parties. So, the Chrome thing for me was in reflecting back was the 1964 Challenger of the Mississippi, Freedom Democratic party to the National Democratic Convention because that was where the stage was set that allowed this to happen. Because without opening up the national political situation in the country, this wasn't going to happen. And you know, we we could have gotten the right to vote without the opening. Up of the national political party structure. Found the party structure wasn't opened up by getting the right to vote. The party structure was opened up by directly challenging in Mississippi. To be the right of Mississippi to send on an all white delegation, to the 1964 National Democratic Convention and it was Fannie Lou Hamer, and all the people in that delegation that really forced the national Democratic party to open up, you know. And she was, it was that I mean Barack Obama could not be running for president. If he had not been able to secure a party to run for and off the Democratic Party from the time of after the Civil War, right? Until 1964 there were no black delegates to the Democratic party from the south and it was that action more than anything else, which opened up the National Party, struction allowed eventually. What is happening today to happen off? Can you take us from 1964? The voting, the battle for voting and civil rights to what you see happening today to the progress and also off warnings that you have for us or suggestions recommendations. So my main idea and I try to look at this event in through the lens of the evolution in this country off of the idea of who, in our country are the people who have constitutional rights, and constitutional responsibilities and off the evolution of the expansion of that. And I think the country kind of Moves In Cycles which take roughly around three-quarters of a century. So I look at the time from 1787 until the Civil War as a time in which we had yes, constitutional people mostly white men off but then we had constitutional property, African Americans who were slaves and then we had this a horrendous War, six hundred thousand people Killed during the war and we come out of the war. And Lincoln Obama is rightly looking at Thursday, we get rid of the idea of constitutional property but African Americans. Don't quite become full-fledged, citizens and wage. When we, when Mississippi people all the time was saying, well, we want to be first class citizens and so the implication being that they were second or even third jobs I said, as soon as so the civil rights movement and and here, I have to, I think we have to give credibility to the sit-in movement to the young black students at Birth. Historically black colleges who are really dismantle Jim Crow in the area of its public accommodations with the sit-in movement off. They actually dismantle that aspect of Jim Crow. So then there was this dismantling of it around the right to vote, and what I was talking about earlier, also around the National Party structure, but you know, when I was sitting in the federal district court house I was down in the witness stand and if you remember this was in the spring of 1963 and at that time, President Kennedy was still alive. Bobby Kennedy was Attorney General Marshall is the Assistant Attorney General for civil rights, and John Doe was my lawyer, he was the chief litigator in the field and the judge judge claimed. That was a federal district judge. We had taken hundreds of sharecroppers in Greenwood to register and then subsequently the snake field secretaries. Had been arrested and Burke a dog. It says we moved to the federal court so just Clayton looks over and he wants to know why are we taking illiterates down to register to vote off? So in a nutshell I answer is well the country can have its cake and eat it too. It can have denied a whole people access to literacy through its political arrangements and then turn around and say well you can't access politics because your illiterate and we won that struggle. We wanted in the courts and it was judged. Wisdom that decision in the case of us. V Louisiana, where he said well we can't allow the state of Louisiana to have authority over the actual qualifications of voting that has to be moved to the federal system. So the nineteen sixty five Voting Rights Act gave the phone number Will government the responsibility of saying who could qualify for the right to vote. So but we didn't win the issue of literacy and I think that's the issue, the band in this evolution of, who are the Constitutional people. The children of our country. Do not have a constitutional right to a public school education and you have to look at the Rodriguez case, 1971 Mexican Americans who sued in Texas for Equity. Their case went all the way up to Josephine Court. And the Supreme Court said you don't you can't come here into the federal system for Relief because there's no substance of federal wrong to a constitutional. Right to an education, public school education in this country. I think really that in our country and this is going to be a huge challenge for the wage. Last Administration in our country. I think we run, sharecrop, education. That is an education that you can trace. When the judge asked that question, because in the Delta of Mississippi sharecroppers were signed to do a certain kind of work. And so the idea was you only need a certain kind of education so often, if we carry that forward into the information age, then we will have service in our cities. Just like we had service in the delta, Mississippi in the Industrial Age. And this is the huge challenge facing our country. I think, what we need is a movement for our constitutional rights. We need a constitutional amendment something, which simply says every child in the country, is a child of the country, and is entitled to a quality public school education. That's civil rights leader. Bob, Moses former field secretary for years. Nick, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and founder of the algebra project. He's died in Florida at the age of 86 to see our interview with him on Obama's, first inauguration along Alice Walker. Go to democracynow.org. I'm Amy Goodman, thanks for joining us..

Democracy Now! Audio
"lincoln obama" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Talked about how civil rights activists in the sixties help. Play the foundation for Obama's presidency in order to become president of the United States. You have to be nominated by one of the two political parties. So, the Chrome thing for me was in reflecting back was the 1964 Challenger of the Mississippi, Freedom Democratic party to the National Democratic Convention because that was where the stage was set that allowed this to happen. Because without opening up the national political situation in the country, this wasn't going to happen. And you know, we we could have gotten the right to vote without the opening. Up of the national political party structure. Found the party structure wasn't opened up by getting the right to vote. The party structure was opened up by directly challenging in Mississippi. To be the right of Mississippi to send on an all white delegation, to the 1964 National Democratic Convention and it was Fannie Lou Hamer, and all the people in that delegation that really forced the national Democratic party to open up, you know. And she was, it was that I mean Barack Obama could not be running for president. If he had not been able to secure a party to run for and off the Democratic Party from the time of after the Civil War, right? Until 1964 there were no black delegates to the Democratic party from the south and it was that action more than anything else, which opened up the National Party, struction allowed eventually. What is happening today to happen off? Can you take us from 1964? The voting, the battle for voting and civil rights to what you see happening today to the progress and also off warnings that you have for us or suggestions recommendations. So my main idea and I try to look at this event in through the lens of the evolution in this country off of the idea of who, in our country are the people who have constitutional rights, and constitutional responsibilities and off the evolution of the expansion of that. And I think the country kind of Moves In Cycles which take roughly around three-quarters of a century. So I look at the time from 1787 until the Civil War as a time in which we had yes, constitutional people mostly white men off but then we had constitutional property, African Americans who were slaves and then we had this a horrendous War, six hundred thousand people Killed during the war and we come out of the war. And Lincoln Obama is rightly looking at Thursday, we get rid of the idea of constitutional property but African Americans. Don't quite become full-fledged, citizens and wage. When we, when Mississippi people all the time was saying, well, we want to be first class citizens and so the implication being that they were second or even third jobs I said, as soon as so the civil rights movement and and here, I have to, I think we have to give credibility to the sit-in movement to the young black students at Birth. Historically black colleges who are really dismantle Jim Crow in the area of its public accommodations with the sit-in movement off. They actually dismantle that aspect of Jim Crow. So then there was this dismantling of it around the right to vote, and what I was talking about earlier, also around the National Party structure, but you know, when I was sitting in the federal district court house I was down in the witness stand and if you remember this was in the spring of 1963 and at that time, President Kennedy was still alive. Bobby Kennedy was Attorney General Marshall is the Assistant Attorney General for civil rights, and John Doe was my lawyer, he was the chief litigator in the field and the judge judge claimed. That was a federal district judge. We had taken hundreds of sharecroppers in Greenwood to register and then subsequently the snake field secretaries. Had been arrested and Burke a dog. It says we moved to the federal court so just Clayton looks over and he wants to know why are we taking illiterates down to register to vote off? So in a nutshell I answer is well the country can have its cake and eat it too. It can have denied a whole people access to literacy through its political arrangements and then turn around and say well you can't access politics because your illiterate and we won that struggle. We wanted in the courts and it was judged. Wisdom that decision in the case of us. V Louisiana, where he said well we can't allow the state of Louisiana to have authority over the actual qualifications of voting that has to be moved to the federal system. So the nineteen sixty five Voting Rights Act gave the phone number Will government the responsibility of saying who could qualify for the right to vote. So but we didn't win the issue of literacy and I think that's the issue, the band in this evolution of, who are the Constitutional people. The children of our country. Do not have a constitutional right to a public school education and you have to look at the Rodriguez case, 1971 Mexican Americans who sued in Texas for Equity. Their case went all the way up to Josephine Court. And the Supreme Court said you don't you can't come here into the federal system for Relief because there's no substance of federal wrong to a constitutional. Right to an education, public school education in this country. I think really that in our country and this is going to be a huge challenge for the wage. Last Administration in our country. I think we run, sharecrop, education. That is an education that you can trace. When the judge asked that question, because in the Delta of Mississippi sharecroppers were signed to do a certain kind of work. And so the idea was you only need a certain kind of education so often, if we carry that forward into the information age, then we will have service in our cities. Just like we had service in the delta, Mississippi in the Industrial Age. And this is the huge challenge facing our country. I think, what we need is a movement for our constitutional rights. We need a constitutional amendment something, which simply says every child in the country, is a child of the country, and is entitled to a quality public school education. That's civil rights leader. Bob, Moses former field secretary for years. Nick, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and founder of the algebra project. He's died in Florida at the age of 86 to see our interview with him on Obama's, first inauguration along Alice Walker. Go to democracynow.org. I'm Amy Goodman, thanks for joining us..

Playin' & Slayin'
"lincoln obama" Discussed on Playin' & Slayin'
"And then i added in the presidential box. So it's got like clinton bush reagan lincoln obama and trump so as it caused them like forty to forty five sixteen at doesn't call name. I'm sure from a licensing standpoint but it's the six president miniatures and they all have a red Like panic switch ability. Or you know the push. The red button of course And then rpg. So i got the gm box the rule book and this scenario book Rpg is interesting Probably talk about it in depth more after read but it it definitely takes the Takes the The zombie side feel and puts it into rpg. So it's it's not very like indepth or crunchy if feels like it plays fast and easy And in in that. Zombie side style. So i don't know how much of its role playing or how much of it's just Using miniatures and playing zombie side without action points. Yeah i don't know. I haven't figured it out yet. But there's like an equipping phase where you you talk about what you get before you go and the platforms are drawn or the the maps for the scenarios are drawn very much like the board and with goals and like what you're trying to do So it's it's interesting It's a little light. The character creation is is not very enough. But it's pretty cool y- of the again not. I did terrible happen. It's literally not. I didn't even open the box. I dislike oh. I haven't even cracked it open yet. But that was what got me into that i was just. I was more curious. Like i want to see how they turns into an are. Pg and see yes so again. Like one of the million other rpg's that i buy and read and then never play but who knows. Maybe we do get this to the table in some form. But your new podcast right. Yeah between the sheets yup. Yeah speaking of between the sheets. I forgot this playing. I did play an rpg So eric clap. Saddle friend of the show in front of all of us Had messaged me about playing cyberpunk read cyberpunk roleplaying game from our tau. Saurian games So myself in another friend of his who had not met before but evidently a co worker of joshua's.