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I am free because of the emancipation proclamation, brought forth by Abraham Lincoln, I am legal because of the Supreme Court ruling of Loving v. Virginia, I can march because of the Civil Rights movements, I can vote because of the Women's Suffrage movement, and I can run for any office because of Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Alix Lawson
#hillary clinton#pantsuitnation#poem#black#white#race#gender#women#politics#civil rights#history#womens suffrage#supreme court
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And even though it all went wrong, I’ll stand before the Lord of Song with nothing on my tongue but Hallelujah
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“I first ran for Congress in 1999, and I got beat. I just got whooped. I had been in the state legislature for a long time, I was in the minority party, I wasn’t getting a lot done, and I was away from my family and putting a lot of strain on Michelle. Then for me to run and lose that bad, I was thinking maybe this isn’t what I was cut out to do. I was forty years old, and I’d invested a lot of time and effort into something that didn’t seem to be working. But the thing that got me through that moment, and any other time that I’ve felt stuck, is to remind myself that it’s about the work. Because if you’re worrying about yourself—if you’re thinking: ‘Am I succeeding? Am I in the right position? Am I being appreciated?’ – then you’re going to end up feeling frustrated and stuck. But if you can keep it about the work, you’ll always have a path. There’s always something to be done.”
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Yuriko Kotani / Russell Howard’s Stand Up Central
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When you don’t plan on going hard on Halloween.
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This weekend, the National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) opened just down the road from us on the National Mall!
Following decades of work to promote and feature the contributions of African Americans, the Act to establish NMAAHC was authorized by Congress in 2003. The museum officially opened September 24, 2016, as the 19th @smithsonian museum. It is the only national museum dedicated entirely to the documentation of African American life, history, and culture.
In celebration of the opening of the NMAAHC, a 1927 pamphlet showing an early design for an African American memorial museum, and the act that was passed in 2003 are on display in the “Featured Documents” exhibit in the East Rotunda Gallery of the @usnatarchives in Washington, DC, through November 9, 2016.
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5-0 Denmark v. Liechtenstein
So proud. Love this :)
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31.8.2016. | denmark 5:0 liechtenstein (30’ 33’ jørgensen, 49’ cornelius, 62’ fischer, 84’ larsen)
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Watch: Samantha Bee had the ultimate response to Trump’s criticism of Gold Star mom Ghazala Khan
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In a locker room at the University of Bridgeport in Connecticut, people are waiting in line to get their pictures taken with Hillary Clinton before a rally in the school’s gym. It’s a kid-heavy crowd, and Clinton has been chatting easily with them.
But soon there’s only one family left and the mood shifts. Francine and David Wheeler are there with their 13-year-old son, Nate, and his 17-month-old brother, Matty, who’s scrambling around on the floor. They carry a stack of photographs of their other son, Benjamin, who was killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012, when he was 6.
David presses the photos of his dead son on Clinton with the urgency of a parent desperate to keep other parents from having to show politicians pictures of their dead 6-year-olds.
Leaning in toward Wheeler as if they are colleagues mapping out a strategy, Clinton speaks in a voice that is low and serious. “We have to be as organized and focused as they are to beat them and undermine them,” she says. “We are going to be relentless and determined and focused … They are experts at scaring people, telling them, ‘They’re going to take your guns’ … We need the same level of intensity. Intensity is more important than numbers.”
Clinton tells Wheeler that she has already discussed gun control with Chuck Schumer, who will likely be leading the Senate Democrats in 2017; she talks about the differences between state and federal law and between regulatory and legislative fixes, and describes the Supreme Court’s 2008 ruling in District of Columbia v. Heller, which extended the protections of the Second Amendment, as “a terrible decision.” She is practically swelling, Hulk-like, with her desire to describe to this family how she’s going to solve the problem of gun violence, even though it is clear that their real problem — the absence of their middle child — is unsolvable. When Matty grabs the front of his diaper, Clinton laughs, suggesting that he either needs a change or is pretending to be a baseball player. She is warm, present, engaged, but not sappy. For Clinton, the highest act of emotional respect is perhaps to find something to do, not just something to say.
“I’m going to do everything I can,” she tells Wheeler. “Everything I can.”
After the family leaves the room, Clinton and her team move quietly down the long hall toward the gym. As they walk, Clinton wordlessly hands her aide Huma Abedin a postcard of Benjamin Wheeler, making eye contact to ensure that Abedin looks at the boy’s face before putting the card in her bag. The group pauses at the entrance of the gym, where 1,200 people are warmed up and screaming for Hillary. Clinton turns to me unexpectedly, and I mutter, “I don’t know how you do that … ”
“Yeah,” she says, looking right at me. “It’s really hard.”
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