including its after math, that made violence against the descendants of slaves literally routine in places like mississippi. but you can't understand that, before the lynching of emmett till without understanding the history and brutal legacy of american slavery. what it did not just to black people but also the ways in which it warped white society. the conceit that enslaved people developed skills while in captivity suggests that black people arrived in this country as uncivilized savages without value or humanity, and without slavery, they would have been nothing. it reframes slavery as an act of mercy, suggesting that african people were civilized by the people who kidnapped them, raped them, subjected them to forced breeding, and sold their children like cattle, and whose sons and grandsons were given a literal license to kill children like emmett till, as the wages of being white. joining me now is brent legs, executive director of the
is she telling you? mr; hazel, your daughter is there, what is she telling you?— is she telling you? my daughters arrived early _ is she telling you? my daughters arrived early hours _ is she telling you? my daughters arrived early hours saturday - arrived early hours saturday morning. _ arrived early hours saturday morning, she is there with my two grandsons — morning, she is there with my two grandsons. by saturday lunchtime the hotel that they were in was actually starting _ hotel that they were in was actually starting to — hotel that they were in was actually starting to catch fire, all the hotel— starting to catch fire, all the hotel staff had left but told them that buses would be coming for them, nobody— that buses would be coming for them, nobody came for them. they walked for about— nobody came for them. they walked for about half—an—hour to another hotel— for about half—an—hour to another hotel that — for about half—an—hour to another hotel that was closer to the sea, that hotel — hotel that was closer to the sea, that hotel then was evacuated as well, _ that hotel then was evacuated as well, and — that hotel then was evacuated as well, and they didn't know where they were — well, and they didn't know where they were going, there was no help from anybody other than the greek people _ from anybody other than the greek people who are absolutely the best in the _ people who are absolutely the best in the world. if it hadn't of been for the — in the world. if it hadn't of been for the greek people, people would be starving, and dehydrated with it, because _ be starving, and dehydrated with it, because they are the ones that are providing _ because they are the ones that are providing everything. the government is not _ providing everything. the government is not providing anything out there. my daughter has gone with jet2, they
procedures. they've also committed to giving ukraine effectively a louder voice, a clearform of communication with nato itself. significant developments from the nato side. president zelensky flew in here this afternoon and this evening, he's been at a dinner with other heads of state at a more social affair this evening. a few hours earlier, he was at a rally not just a few miles from here. he spoke at that rally. just take a listen to the language he uses. translation: today here in vilnius, we have a ukrainian _ flag from the battlefield in bakhmut. bakhmut is one of the biggest battles for freedom in europe. it will be remembered by our grandparents our grandsons. cheering translation: i came here today believing in the partners, -
anybody who breaks the law should be held accountable even if there are a former president. >> this dais, i want to first reclaimed my condolences to your loss. i want to reemphasize to our audience that in addition to losing your daughter, aj, the thing that touched me when i spoke to you was attorney crump on the phone. her four children. you are grand children lost their mother just a week ago. for their mother standing up for them. it was gut-wrenching to hear you tell joy reid, my msnbc colleague here earlier this week that your two grandsons have been blaming themselves for what happened. the older being unable to save his mother, blaming himself. can you tell us how they are and you how you are and how you are holding up tonight. >> how are the kids holding up is, there is no words to
these are inventors of white people in hollywood. right? and so, people think that mascot thing is just about the name. in the case of the washington football team, it was a dictionary defined racial slur. nation native peoples had never really been alive to drive our representation. people need to see our stories because they are good stories. >> they need to not mind our stories. >> exactly, exactly. >> amber, what's it like to play native women in more accurate ways instead of sort of stereotypes? >> it is, like, the bridge between us feeling scene and our people, who know who we actually are, and what our lives are actually like. we have been storytellers forever. anybody else who is in the business of storytelling, to me, is playing with an army. so, i think it's only right that we get to take that back now. >> nancy, what's it like to see the portrayals of native people change over your lifetime? >> i don't think it's really changed a lot. my grandsons where -- there were just glowing opinions. he was, like, this cartoon characters. doing the woo, we, we, you know?
a very long, sad story. fathers and sons and husbands and wives sexual delusions, murders, suicide and secrets. some of the secrets no doubt were burned up in the fire, but some things we do know. they go to the darkest recesses of the human heart. >> the story begins years ago with a cheerful young woman called susan cox who fell for jobs, they are her parents as they spoke with us they can fence they were still in shock after the disaster that claimed their two young grandsons. they recall so clearly there early fears about their daughters -- i >> had a bad feeling every time i saw him. i even asked my daughter why are you marrying him? >> josh's sister jennifer graves told us that as a child she was wary of him to. >> when josh was a boy he was troubled in some ways, wasn't
>> you're in a position that nobody could've imagined -- >> right? you don't automatically default to the notion that the person you're dealing with is a psychopath. it's difficult when one goes south on you like this one did. >> the cox is don't blame david, not at all. and they've worked hard to stay calm, even after the loss of their grandsons, along with josh and whatever he may have known about susan. >> i think he was very selfish. and that is why he took the kids. if he couldn't have them, no one could have some. >> i would've appreciated it if he could have left a note and told us we're susan was, something. >> maybe the point was not to tell anyone. >> yeah. >> yeah. i'm sure he wants for us to never find her. >> he is still matted us, you know? matt it does because we won't give up on our daughter. on finding our daughter. >> investigators have not given up either.
James M. Hawk's Historical True Story of Love Letters Amidst WWI Is Displayed at the L.A. Times Festival of Books 2023 webwire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from webwire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
An elderly Harare woman has been granted a protection order against her three grandsons, who have been tormenting her for the past two years.Acquisillia Makonyo...