Monday, February 10, 2020
BBC HARDtalk (2016): Julian Assange 4th Year in Ecuador Embassy Highlighted by Foreign Minister (Guillaume Long) Interview
Trump Has Total Meltdown over Viral Photo Showing His Tan Lines
Photo Credit: U.S. President Donald Trump walks across the South Lawn to the Oval Office as he returns from a day trip from North Carolina at the White House in Washington, U.S., February 7, 2020. - Joshua Roberts | Reuters
Labels:
Donald Trump
US Sanctions Venezuela Again to Prove Socialism Doesn't Work
Arab League Rejects Trump's Middle East Plan
The 200-year-old Diary That's Rewriting Gay History
Historians from Oxford University have been taken aback to discover that Matthew Tomlinson's diary from 1810 contains such open-minded views about same-sex attraction being a "natural" human tendency.
The diary challenges preconceptions about what "ordinary people" thought about homosexuality - showing there was a debate about whether someone really should be discriminated against for their sexuality.
"In this exciting new discovery, we see a Yorkshire farmer arguing that homosexuality is innate and something that shouldn't be punished by death," says Oxford researcher Eamonn O'Keeffe. » | Sean Coughlan | Monday, February 10, 2020
Labels:
homosexuality
Why a Young Former Mayor Is Surging in US Election
There's an old saying about the way the two parties pick their presidential nominees - Democrats fall in love; Republicans fall in line.
After a 2016 election that turned conventional wisdom on its head by producing iconoclastic Donald Trump and establishment-favourite Hillary Clinton as the nominees, that nostrum could be reasserting itself. While the Republican Party is closing ranks behind the president, there's nothing logical or expected about the early success Pete Buttigieg is having in the Democratic fight to take on Trump in November.
He's the former mayor of a modest-sized Indiana city, the 306th-largest in the US - a college town like Oxford in the UK, only smaller.
He's 38 years old, which would make him the youngest president in US history.
He's also the first openly gay major-party presidential candidate, a historic candidacy that would have seemed inconceivable just a few decades ago, when Republicans were campaigning - and winning - on opposition to gay marriage and mainstream Democrats, by and large, avoided the issue. » | Anthony Zurcher, North America reporter | Sunday, February 9, 2020
Labels:
Pete Buttigieg
Saturday, February 08, 2020
Brexit : De Gaulle "La Grande Bretagne et l'Europe" | Archive INA
Simon Wallfisch ist einer von 3000 britischen Juden, die einen deutschen Paß nehmen
Zum Artikel »
Die Schwulenheiler | Panorama - die Reporter | NDR
Labels:
Deutschland,
Homosexualität,
NDR,
Panorama
Der "Schwulen-Paragraf" | Doku
Verbrechen: Liebe - Seltene Bilder aus der NS-Zeit | Kontrovers | BR Fernsehen
Verbotene Liebe - Homosexualität im NS-Regime
Friday, February 07, 2020
Joe Scarborough Reads Bible to Critique Trump’s Prayer Breakfast Speech | Morning Joe | MSNBC
Labels:
Donald Trump,
Morning Joe,
MSNBC
Interview with Anita Lasker-Wallfisch
In this interview the cellist Anita Lasker-Wallfisch discusses her childhood in Breslau, studying cello with Leo Rostal in Berlin, being imprisoned for trying to escape to France, playing cello in the camp orchestra in Auschwitz, being liberated in Bergen-Belsen, arriving in Britain in 1946, starting to work as a musician in London, becoming a founder member of the English Chamber Orchestra and being part of a community of musical émigrés in London. She also speaks about her husband Peter Wallfisch, his career as a concert pianist and his time as a professor at the Royal College of Music, and about other émigrés including the violinist Maria Lidka and the pianist Alice Herz-Sommer.
This interview is presented as part of the ORAL HISTORY PROJECT "Singing a Song in a Foreign Land", which focuses on musicians who emigrated from Central Europe because of Nazi persecution in the 1930s and 40s.
Wednesday, February 05, 2020
Romney, Breaking With Republicans, Will Vote to Convict Trump of Abuse of Power
WASHINGTON — Senator Mitt Romney of Utah announced on Wednesday that he would vote to convict President Trump of abuse of power, making him the first Republican to support removing Mr. Trump for his bid to pressure Ukraine to investigate his political rivals.
“I think the case was made,” Mr. Romney said in an interview in his Senate office on Wednesday morning, ahead of an afternoon floor speech in which he grew emotional as he explained his decision. He declared Mr. Trump “guilty of an appalling abuse of public trust.”
Mr. Romney said he would vote against the second article of impeachment, obstruction of Congress, arguing that House Democrats had failed to exhaust their legal options for securing testimony and other evidence they had sought. But the first-term senator said that Democrats had proved their first charge, that the president had misused his office for his own personal gain. » | Mark Leibovich | Wednesday, February 5, 2020
Mark Littlewood In Conversation with Simon Clark
Rep. Tim Ryan Walks Out of State of the Union: ‘Give Me a Break!’ | The Last Word | MSNBC
Tuesday, February 04, 2020
A Very Stable Genius: A Conversation with Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker
Labels:
Donald Trump
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