TDS Time Machine | How Not to Celebrate MLK Day

TDS Time Machine | How Not to Celebrate MLK D...

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This Week's News | Jon on Alex Pretti Shooting & Desi on "Melania" Doc and Ilhan Omar Attack

Jon Stewart dives into Alex Pretti's killing by federal agents in Minnesota, the ensuing gaslighting from the Trump administration despite clear video evidence, and the Right ignoring the Second Amendment to justify Pretti's murder. Desi Lydic weighs in on Border Patrol Commander ...  Show more

Melania's $40 Million Docu-Bribe Movie Premieres & Dems Make ICE Demands

Democrats express their outrage over the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, with Chuck Schumer calling Kristi Noem and Stephen Miller "f**king liars" and Hakeem Jeffries on accidental mute. Plus, Desi Lydic plunges into the world of Melania ahead of her documentary deb ...  Show more

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The Hit Song that Gave Us MLK Day
HISTORY This Week

January 15, 1969. It's been less than a year since the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Friends, family, and followers are gathered at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where Dr. King preached. They are there to remember him on his birthday, honor his legacy, and pre ...  Show more

Making a Case for Hope Through Racial Healing
Bloomberg Businessweek

Watch Carol and Tim LIVE every day on YouTube: http://bit.ly/3vTiACF. Rev. Dr. Bernice King, CEO of The King Center, talks about honoring Martin Luther King Jr. Day. La June Montgomery Tabron, President and CEO of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, discusses her book How We Heal: A Jou ...  Show more

509. America in '68: The Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. (Part 2)
The Rest Is History

The peaceful figurehead of the Civil Rights movement in the early 1960s, Dr Martin Luther King had inspired hundreds of thousands to demand equal rights for African Americans. But by 1968, the once uniting leader seemed to be losing popularity, both amongst activists and in the p ...  Show more

The Double Life of a Civil Rights Icon
Reveal

Some of the most enduring photos of the civil rights movement were taken by Ernest Withers. A native of Memphis, Tennessee, Withers earned the trust of Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders. But as it turns out, he was secretly taking photos for the federal gov ...

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