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I guess it’s a bit arrogant to think of your own life as a history, but, well, there it is. Maybe it helps that the narrative is largely a process of bouncing off other people, of what they taught me or the mysteries they left.
This is started the day before Joseph Robinette Biden, Jr. -“Joe” to most folks will be inaugurated as the 46th president of the United States. The country survived the 45th, but I’m not the only one who thought that issue was in doubt several times. The outgoing president was so fond of being an autocrat he tried to make the wish the father of the fact. I’m fairly certain that the new POTUS will not be asking anyone to refer to him as “The Joe.”
Democrats Want a Return to Civility ; When Did They Practice It? pjmedia.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pjmedia.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A 2020 Joe Biden campaign ad described the pending election as an âopportunity to leave the dark, angry politics of the past behind us.â After Bidenâs election, he, Democrats and media urge a âreturn to civility.â But when did the Democrats practice the very civility to which they seek to return?
Letâs go to the videotape:
When Barry Goldwater accepted the 1964 Republican nomination, Californiaâs Democratic Gov. Pat Brown said, âThe stench of fascism is in the air.â
Former Rep. William Clay Sr., D-Mo., said President Ronald Reagan was âtrying to replace the Bill of Rights with fascist precepts lifted verbatim from âMein Kampf.ââ
How these dinner conversations turned Thurgood Marshall into an icon
Tenure of first Black judge ever to serve on Supreme Court ended 30 years ago
Keith Dunlap, Digital Content Team, Graham Media Group
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Thurgood Marshall at the White House, where President Johnson addressed members of the National Emergency Committee of the National Council on Crime and Delinquency. (Getty Images)
As it turns out, random dinner conversations in a Baltimore kitchen led to a significant piece of U.S. history.
While growing up in Baltimore, the late Thurgood Marshall would go to local courts with his father to observe legal arguments, according to the website Mental Floss.