intervention in vietnam but only as a testing ground for developing counter insurgency. strategies. but by nine hundred sixty five under the johnson administration the country was at war while he was deeply troubled by the current conflict and he could not yet oppose it in public because it was part of his brother s political legacy. meanwhile more than two hundred thousand men were drafted into the us armed forces in one thousand nine hundred eighty five alone many of them from the working classes. johnson also ordered massive air strikes in north vietnam kennedy disagreed with his strategy because he believed that it would not bring hanoi to the negotiating table. by all of the heat concerned i m opposed to resuming the bombing at the moment until i have information that indicate that such reduction is necessary than our national interest. by nine hundred sixty seven vietnam was no longer john kennedy s legacy
but it was the vietnam war that was to become the turning point in his political destiny. in one nine hundred sixty two but we had supported his brother s intervention in vietnam but only as a testing ground for developing counter insurgency strategies. but by nine hundred sixty five under the johnson administration the country was at war. bobby was deeply troubled by the current conflict and he could not yet oppose it in public because it was part of his brother s political legacy. meanwhile more than two hundred thousand men were drafted into the us armed forces in one nine hundred sixty five alone many of them from the working classes. johnson also ordered massive air strikes in north vietnam kennedy disagreed with his strategy because he believed that it would not bring hanoi to the negotiating table. by all that concerned i m opposed to resuming the bombing at the moment until i get
a dream destination for well heeled tourists but with all its luxury shops and flats it s a nightmare for the working classes. could marks afford to live in the inner city absolutely not likely wind up sleeping in a phone booth so what would marx have to say today exploitation commodity fetishism and the power of money which of his theories are still relevant. at piccadilly circus i meet marx research. she came to london a decade ago to study marx his writings in the libraries where he once read and conducted research presented takes us on a walking tour through soho the area where marks once lived all first stop a former red lion pub birthplace of a communist manifesto today it s a cocktail lounge with marks be shocked. surely he would be surprised to see saw ford today because i think that i mean it was really the. it was about
meridien, mississippi, northeast high school and they actually had noble believes this, but the basketball courts withes were packed clay. i was playing basketball with a kid who was from the most rural part of mississippi as white working classes and halfway through the basketball game he zipped out, i saw him run across the field and we road our bikes past this house and knocked on the door, he was like what s up? he opened the door and he was in a little coat and tie and it was like a i don t know, a friday or something like that. i said what s up? he said president truman died. we re watching the funeral. but the parents called him home, i m sure this same story there. that is a democratic party. that s fdr s democratic party that beat republicans for 30, 40 years. it has nothing to do with party but it s what the
but the quinnipiac poll, there was i think 48-42% support for this travel ban. yeah. exactly. and that s the problem. we are not a direct democracy. we are a representative republic. we re not supposed to be run by mob rule. and by the way, working classes have always resented immigrants in the united states of america. it s the beacon of liberty to the world that we accept people who aren t necessarily always the most desirable on the face. okay. we know the presidents in the past have used their executive wh order when it comes to this. george h.w. bush used it 12 times. george w. bush, six times. barack obama, 19 times. ron, to you, why is it so different now, why are there so many people protesting on the streets? why is this so sdmefrl. i think it s controversial? i think it s the sweeping magnitude and the sent to which both in his own the extent to come which both in his own words