Hype for the Future 105B: National Forests of Texas

Introduction Within the State of Texas, a total of four (4) national forest zones are included, obviously on the eastern side of the State in which more humidity is typical. For each national forest, a distinct story is told about the State as a whole, with every particular regional divide representing cultural distinctions as well as geographic and potentially natural distinctions. National Forests Within the State of Texas, the national forests are named Sam Houston, Angelina, Davy […]

https://novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026/02/13/hype-for-the-future-105b-national-forests-of-texas/

Hype for the Future 105B: National Forests of Texas

Introduction Within the State of Texas, a total of four (4) national forest zones are included, obviously on the eastern side of the State in which more humidity is typical. For each national fores…

novaTopFlex

Lyndon B. Johnson Used CIA to Go After Famous Singer After She Criticized Vietnam War

[This article continues CovertAction Magazine’s efforts to expose the CIA’s nefarious history. It is also special for Black History Month. See previous CAM articles for Black History Month here, here and here.—Editors] Eartha Kitt was a magnetic singer...

https://murica.website/2026/02/lyndon-b-johnson-used-cia-to-go-after-famous-singer-after-she-criticized-vietnam-war/

Lyndon B. Johnson Used CIA to Go After Famous Singer After She Criticized Vietnam War – The USA Potato

22 de noviembre de 1963. Asesinato del presidente de EEUU John F. Kennedy. Toma posesión Lyndon B. Johnson #efemérides #noviembre #johnfkennedy #eeuu #presidentekennedy #lyndonbjohnson #lyndonjohnson #asesinatodekennedy

https://zurl.co/lgxWZ

Love That Lyndon: AI Has an LBJ Problem

[This article is part of a series this week on the JFK assassination coinciding with our November 18 webinar entitled “New Evidence, Old Questions: The Latest Declassified JFK Files.”—Editors] On October 5, 2025, JFK researcher Robert Morrow asked X’s ...

https://murica.website/2025/11/love-that-lyndon-ai-has-an-lbj-problem/

Love That Lyndon: AI Has an LBJ Problem – The USA Potato

President Lyndon B. Johnson and the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967

Last night's episode of John Oliver's "Last Week Tonight" on public media and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in the United States moved me multiple times, most of all with the 1969 clip of Fred Rogers testifying to Congress about the purpose of "Mr. Roger's Neighborhood" as part of a

111 Words

Pablo Larraín, Natalie Portman – „Jackie“ (2016)

Dieses Biopic über Jackie Kennedy war für Natalie Portman kein Karriereschritt, sondern eine Transformation. In eine Ikone, die selbst bereits eine Kunstfigur war. Die First Lady als Maske, als Spiegel, als Mythos: keine Biografie, sondern eine Performance der Performance einer anderen. Pablo Larraín hat daraus ein Filmporträt gemacht, das nachwirkt, scharfkantig, unruhig, durchaus schwer erträglich – und gerade deshalb wahrhaftig. (ARTE)

Pablo Larraín, Natalie Portman - "Jackie" (2016)

Dieses Biopic über Jackie Kennedy war für Natalie Portman kein Karriereschritt, sondern eine Transformation. In eine Ikone, die selbst bereits eine Kunstfigur war. Die First Lady als Maske, als Spiegel, als Mythos: keine Biografie, sondern eine Performance der Performance einer anderen. Pablo Larraín hat daraus ein Filmporträt gemacht, das nachwirkt, scharfkantig, unruhig, durchaus schwer erträgli

NexxtPress

Letters from an American – August 5, 2025 – Heather Cox Richardson

Letters from an American, August 5, 2025 (Tuesday)

By Heather Cox Richardson, Aug 05, 2025

Sixty years ago tomorrow, on August 6, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act. The need for the law was explained in its full title: “An Act to enforce the fifteenth amendment to the Constitution, and for other purposes.”

In the wake of the Civil War, Americans tried to create a new nation in which the law treated Black men and white men as equals. In 1865 they ratified the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, outlawing enslavement except as punishment for crimes. In 1868 they adjusted the Constitution again, guaranteeing that anyone born or naturalized in the United States—except certain Indigenous Americans—was a citizen, opening up suffrage to Black men. In 1870, after Georgia legislators expelled their newly seated Black colleagues, Americans defended the right of Black men to vote by adding that right to the Constitution.

All three of those amendments—the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth—gave Congress the power to enforce them. In 1870, Congress established the Department of Justice to do just that. Reactionary white southerners had been using state laws, and the unwillingness of state judges and juries to protect Black Americans from white gangs and cheating employers, to keep Black people subservient. White men organized as the Ku Klux Klan to terrorize Black men and to keep them and their white allies from voting to change that system. In 1870 the federal government stepped in to protect Black rights and prosecute members of the Ku Klux Klan.

With federal power now behind the Constitutional protection of equality, threatening jail for those who violated the law, white opponents of Black voting changed their argument against it.

In 1871 they began to say that they had no problem with Black men voting on racial grounds; their objection to Black voting was that Black men, just out of enslavement, were poor and uneducated. They were voting for lawmakers who promised them public services like roads and schools, and which could only be paid for with tax levies.

The idea that Black voters were socialists—they actually used that term in 1871—meant that white northerners who had fought to replace the hierarchical society of the Old South with a society based on equality began to change their tune. They looked the other way as white men kept Black men from voting, first with terrorism and then with grandfather clauses that cut out Black men without mentioning race by permitting a man to vote if his grandfather had, literacy tests in which white registrars got to decide who passed, poll taxes, and so on. States also cut up districts unevenly to favor the Democrats, who ran an all-white, segregationist party. By 1880 the South was solidly Democratic, and it would remain so until 1964.

Southern states always held elections: it was just foreordained that Democrats would win them.

Black Americans never accepted this state of affairs, but their opposition did not gain powerful national traction until after World War II.

During that war, Americans from all walks of life had turned out to defeat fascism, a government system based on the idea that some people are better than others. Americans defended democracy and, for all that Black Americans fought in segregated units, and that race riots broke out in cities across the country during the war years, and that the government interned Japanese Americans, lawmakers began to recognize that the nation could not effectively define itself as a democracy if Black and Brown people lived in substandard housing, received substandard educations, could not advance from menial jobs, and could not vote to change any of those circumstances.

Meanwhile, Black Americans and people of color who had fought for the nation overseas brought home their determination to be treated equally, especially as the financial collapse of European nations loosened their grip on their former African and Asian colonies and launched new nations.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/p/august-5-2025-tuesday

August 5, 2025 (Tuesday) by Heather Cox Richardson

Read on Substack

#2025 #America #CivilWar #DonaldTrump #Education #HeatherCoxRichardson #History #LettersFromAnAmerican #Libraries #LibraryOfCongress #LyndonBJohnson #Politics #PresidentJohnson #Resistance #Science #Substack #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates #VotingRightsAct

https://c.im/@[email protected]

The Zhi Zhu post (attached) is one of the most important messages of the past week. Franklin Roosevelt saw the Hitler threat long before the American public did. FDR needed to do the groundwork for American intervention, which, by the way, started long before the bombing of Pearl Harbor. US history is filled with major examples. Right now, according to public opinion polling, the American public is not with us on Gaza. We need Capitol Hill "leadership" to lead on this issue and many others and we positively are not getting it. It has been altogether too convenient to just slide along while Bernie Sanders says what needs to be said. Young or not so young, we need a new group of Democratic politicians who do not leave their spines at home.

Eightysix47

: #berniesanders #democrats #donaldtrump #eightysix47 #fdr #franklindroosevelt #franklinroosevelt #gaza #israel #lyndonbjohnson #lyndonjohnson #palestine #palestinians #uspol #uspolitics :

"Books open your mind, broaden your mind, and strengthen you as nothing else can." -William Feather

A few great book quotes. Got any favorites of your own?

#books #education #intolerance #ignorance #prejudice #bigotry #bias #hate #racism #antisemitism #quotestoliveby #quotes #quote #quoteoftheday #inspiration #inspirationalquotes #LyndonBJohnson