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All In With Chris Hayes

restless right now. and he should be. >> what's the most important think people should know about marley evers williams? >> that i am human. i am prone to error. i try not to make errors. i am very strong about what i believe in. and i will go to the nth degree to see that take place -- medgar was very much the same way. as you know, he gave his life for freedom of his people. >> my full interview with a beautiful and wonderful marley evers is online right now at the reidout block. to have a look. and that's tonight's reidout. all in chris hayes starts now. 's r eidout all in chris hayes start>> toni- >> i am not justifying his

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Morning Joe

medgar, malcolm, martin, jack and bobby. within a five-year period. political assassinations, on average, once every 12 months. the environment we live in today is at least as combustible, if not more than it was in the mid-1960s. what happened to paul pelosi in some respects, he was lucky. this was a horrible attack. i feel terrible for the burden that nancy pelosi and her family must bear right now. but in many respects, we've been lucky. we were lucky that no member of congress was seriously injured, was not seriously injured on january 6th. we were lucky that the vice president of the united states was not injured on january 6th. we've been lucky, and it shouldn't take someone dying for those in this country who

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The Sunday Show With Jonathan Capehart

democracy. norman lear, you know, flew countless missions over germany to protect democracy. med gar ever was assassinated in his driveway. i made a film about it called "those in mississippi." and his wife gave me -- i have this here -- this was in medgar's wallet. this was his poll tax receipt. you can see on the back there's some bloodstains and things on it. this was what he had to -- it was on him the day he was assassinated. this is what you had to pay in order to vote. well, in 1965, and johnson passed the voting rights act, okay, we're moving in the right direction to allow everybody access to the ballot box. well, we've seen the supreme

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CNN International-20150514-05:13:00

a dean of student affairs at medgar hers college. he is survived by his son. some families are waiting for word of their loved ones the. >> and that includes the family of bob gildersleeve, an executive who lives with his wife and two teenage children. >> there were more than 200 people injured in the crash. most have been released, but some are still in critical condition. >> well, you can imagine with the magnitude of a collision such as this that there is going to be tremendous injury, head injuries, rib fractures, orthopedic fractures. and what we have heard at many of the local hochts, is this is what they want to pay for, this is emergency personnel are ready to go, to take care of first

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130829:03:24:00

>> and it's precisely that genius that has brought about member of the congressional the mini-industry of black caucus. appropriating the words of the i'd like to start with you and reverend dr. martin luther king, because there is so much in that ask what it's been like, when speech. that time came so fresh off the and so much in the message, that worst day in your life? people -- i want to play a brief >> quite honestly, it's been sound clip. difficult, but it's been very encouraging, and exciting. we're going from the most sublime to the most mundane, i all in the same. apologize. this is what 30, 40, 50 years let's go back. does, which has been appropriated by the conservatives, the right, what he actually meant. take a listen. medgar had been assassinated >> if dr. king were alive today, i believe he would be broken about a month before the march hearted about what has happened on washington. to the traditional family, and one of the most tragic and not only among blacks. >> we feel the spirit of dr. unnerving experiences in my life martin luther king jr. who would and for my children, he came challenge us to honor the sacred home from a meeting, holding charters of our liberty. t-shirts that read jim crow must >> i believe that gun go. appreciation day honors the as he got out of the car, he was legacy of dr. martin luther king. shot in the back. >> i'm not asking you for a sort we heard the rifle shot, the of definitive historical account of who would not be in the children ran to the bathroom and graces of the departed. tried to get into the tub. but it is now a game in american politics to appropriate the

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130829:00:52:00

ask what it's been like, when that time came so fresh off the worst day in your life? >> quite honestly, it's been difficult, but it's been very encouraging, and exciting. all in the same. let's go back. medgar had been assassinated about a month before the march on washington. one of the most tragic and unnerving experiences in my life and for my children, he came home from a meeting, holding t-shirts that read jim crow must go. as he got out of the car, he was shot in the back. we heard the rifle shot, the children ran to the bathroom and tried to get into the tub. it had been described as the safest place in the house. medgar had taught them that. i went to the front door, the force of the bullet had pushed him forward in his car, and with

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130829:00:54:00

children, i became very full. because i remembered coretta scott king as well as dr. king, and how much they wanted that family unit together. how much they had suffered, of hearing the reverend bernice king speak and deliver such a forceful message. it reminded me of a father, and i felt a sense of prime with that, i've had all of these mixed emotions. >> when you hear that, one of the things that's been striking to me about the dream defenders is how clearly and forthrightly you place yourself in the tradition of the civil rights struggle. >> yes, of direct action, direct nonviolent action. how do you feel being here, and when you hear the story of medgar evers, knowing the line of sacrifice that has come before you? >> you know, i speak for myself

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130829:03:27:00

record. >> yes, of direct action, direct >> he was speaking for himself. >> the march for jobs and nonviolent action. freedom pamphlet, i'd like to how do you feel being here, and hear you talk about this, we when you hear the story of marched to regress old grievances and helped to resolve medgar evers, knowing the line an american crisis. born of the twin evils of racism of sacrifice that has come and deprivation, their before you? livelihoods destroyed. the negro unemployed are thrown >> you know, i speak for myself to the streets, driven to and others and say, we're just despair, all america is robbed of the contribution, at a later point they talk about organizing humbled to be here. the unemployed for the march. the civil rights movement is our it will serve no purpose to hold a march. if unemployed people are not compass, it's our blueprint. able to come and add their it's the reason for being, it's the reason we're here. voices to the demonstration. we're blessed to having that as >> there was a profound economic message. >> at first it was going to be a a compass, due north for us. it's humbling to be here, it's march for freedom. humbling they speak so highly of a. phillip randolph, you have to get contents of that word. us, and really the work that we have to do is sadly reminiscent in 1963 -- >> freedom is too -- of the work that was spoken >> you can appropriate by the about in the i have a dream speech. way, very easily. if you put jobs in there, one of >> one of the things that i think is interesting. you did this occupation for a special session, and then a law named after trayvon martin, and racial profiling, and the school, the prison pipeline. are you reinventing direct action, or are you going back and reading the manuals?

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130829:03:25:00

it had been described as the legacy of your father for these different political lines. safest place in the house. medgar had taught them that. i went to the front door, the >> actually, it is. force of the bullet had pushed that is good and bad. him forward in his car, and with the strength of whatever, he was >> how is it good? able to move himself to the door >> it's good because everyone with his keys in his hand. can sort of immerse themselves that's what we saw. and say we do believe in dr. i must tell you, at that point in time, all of the civil rights activities disappeared. king. it was a loss of my husband and my children's father. now, it's upon others of us, we got through the first must challenge them to enforce what dad wanted to happen, and funeral, he was buried at not to try to say, well, dr. arlington cemetery, and my life king fits -- dr. king is against as a widow became front page. affirmative action, that just is not true. so today i felt myself going even though he wanted to see the through so many, many emotions. day when his children would be that of being so proud of seeing judged not by the color of their young people step up, a younger skin, but by the content of generation step up and seize the their character. moment and the opportunity, and reality is, i as an older person having that feeling that am judged by the content of my

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20130829:03:23:00

when you know that most of the people there were black, a third were white. we are the forgotten you're speaking to the larger generation, we are the illegals. we are the thugs. we are the generation that you american public, to the locked in the basement while political establishment. >> the washington post editorial page for instance. movement conversations were >> he was speaking to us, the going on upstairs. young militants. we are the generation that you told to be afraid of our life. he's talked about the marvelous our darkness. militancy. who we came to love. he managed to admonish us at the but we are here today to join in same time. a conversation that will shake don't go overboard. the very foundations of this here was the ultimate skill of capitol. an orator who can speak to >> that was phillip agnew of the several audiences at one time, dream defenders, who just ended and it's as if he -- you would a 31 day occupation. speaking over the weekend in washington, d.c., nearly 50 say, yeah, that line was for me. years after the march on and somehow else will say, and washington. yet -- you're right, it doesn't joining me now is the widow of read like a set of grievances, it reads like a poem. slain civil rights leader, founder of the medgar and myrlie evers foundation. congresswoman karen bass, it reads like the oration of a poem. democrat from california and a

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