the economy. inflation remains high but unemployment remains low. jarred bernstein of the president s counsel of economic advisers will try to explain. 31 years after her judiciary committee testimony against clarence thomas, anita hill talks about the supreme court and her bud, believing, live. and laura proof that speaker pelosi ate one bit afraid of donald trump. i m gonna punch him out, i m going to go to jail, i m going to be happy. i m jonathan capehart, and this is the sunday show. this sunday, the january 6th elect committee is closing argument. and what was likely last public hearing on thursday, the committee voted unanimously to subpoena donald trump. after more than a year interviewing more than 1000 witnesses, they want to hear from the man who started it all. the committee also presented never before seen evidence that showed just how horrific things were inside the capitol during the insurrection. there is also exclusive reporting from nbc news that the com
developing. biden s white house calling the situation at the border a challenge at a big problem but still not calling it a crisis. this is as the administration officials blame the trump team for what is happening there. now biden s homeland security chief s warning we are on pace to encounter more individuals on the southwest border when we have in just the last 20 years. john: pretty shocking statement. were going to speak with texas senator john cornyn and arizona s attorney general who is leading efforts to sue the biden administration over its immigration policy. so-called public charge. we begin with casey stegall live at the southern border in alamo, texas. casey, what s the situation? john, sandra, good to see you. the border patrol agent chief for this very sector which is the rio grande valley of south texas, one sector alone covers and encompasses some 277 miles of the entire southern border. over the last couple days, he says his agents have arrested almost
the world. we think all of those things are more important. whether, you know, when democracy is at risk we think that s more important. what i try to explain in believing is that our democracy depends on keeping people safe and secure. and if they can be subjected to gender violence and any of the settings that we know is happening right now, then our democracy itself is that risk because of that behavior. you know, professor hill, the midterms are a little more than three weeks away, abortion is on the ballot, we ve already seen senator lindsey graham propose a national abortion ban. could you speak to how a-limited access to abortion can profoundly affect gender harassment and violence? well, you know, limited access to any kind of rights really keeps women back.
HANOVER Dartmouth College is marking its commencement Sunday after a year in which college leaders have fumbled at key points while navigating the COVID-19 pandemic reversing themselves on two major decisions and also acknowledging that they.
Forum, March 13: It’s time media stops minimizing sex assault
Published: 3/12/2021 10:00:15 PM
Modified: 3/12/2021 10:00:12 PM
It’s time media stops minimizing sex assault
We are glad the
Valley News published our op-ed, “Dartmouth must remove Leon Black’s name” (Feb. 24). However, we are disturbed by an editorial change that was made to one sentence, since it is symptomatic of a larger issue.
In the original version of our op-ed, we concluded by reminding the reader that sexual assault continues at Dartmouth College as documented in the Clery report and elsewhere and that sexual assault is a crime. We were pointing out that Dartmouth needs to commit to fighting gender-based violence on campus. Allowing Leon Black’s name to remain on the arts center building sends exactly the wrong signal that Dartmouth is not serious about changing an institutional culture that has minimized and disregarded sexual violence.