tv Matter of Fact With Soledad O Brien NBC July 11, 2021 5:00am-5:30am PDT
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>> i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america. soledad: let's start at the beginning. >> we live in a great country. soledad: we are going to the root of the challenge we face. >> one nation under god. >> i am a second-class citizen. >> it is not about the military. soledad: we are going to listen, even when the talk turns uncomfortable. >> until black lives matter, not all lives are mattering. soledad: we are going to take in the opinions of others, aim for better understanding of the viewpoints of others. >> don't tell me i have to live
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my life like you. >> there is history here. >> the country does not love you back. >> with liberty and justice for all. soledad: i'm soledad o'brien. welcome to "matter of fact." the american flag is a potent symbol that triggers strong feelings. it evokes everything from pride to protest, duty to disillusionment, allegiance to agony. this show explores all of it as we try to understand more clearly what it means to be an american. our nation is becoming irreversibly diverse. but does that mean we're also irreversibly divided? our special correspondent jessica gomez set off on a roadtrip across the middle of the country on i-70, from denver to st. louis, to find out what people feel about their american identity. >> ♪ jessica: we started our journey in denver, colorado, where the snow was melting under the shadows of the rocky mountains.
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[crack of a baseball bat] jessica: almost time for baseball season. we met laura heshmati picking up her son at practice. >> are you tired? jessica: they invited us home for dinner, where we learned this american family is made up of a multitude of cultures. laura heshmati: heshmeti is a persian last name. my husband is half persian, half mexican. i am mexican american. >> amen. mom: we're talking about what it feels like to be an american. dad: the thought process is when you say america is a melting pot, it actually devalues the different cultures that do make up america. and that the salad bowl analogy is better. naveed: like, you are a tomato and you are a piece of lettuce, but you can still be friends, like something like that.pjessit out to learn where others see themselves in this salad bowl
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that is america. alejandro flores-munez: by me stepping in this country and walking freely in this country, i am american. jessica: on the way out of town, we popped in on alejandro flores-munoz, a gay, undocumented mexican immigrant. alejandro. we put it inside the taco. jessica: the daca recipient, whose mother brought him to the u.s. as a little boy, is now opening one of denver's first cloud kitchens for online delivery only. his business, he says, makes him feel american. alejandro flores-munez: i want to now be in a position to show case that i am paying taxes, that i am employing people, that i have a business. i don't think words will showcase as much as action. jessica: from colorado to kansas. tristan frump: it used to be
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america was the land of opportunity, but now it feels like it is a struggle. jessica: we stopped in hays, with its wild west roots, more than two dozen christian churches, and a lot of red, white, and blue. tristan frump: it's hard to get the job, the career that you want. because once you fall down a well, it's really hard to climb out. jessica: tristan frump, in between manufacturing jobs. a rough childhood, he says, got in the way of his american dream of owning a car repair shop. tristan frump: in my life, it's always been like that. it's like you're a certain class of person. and when people put you down, or put you in that label, it's really hard to imagine how your life could really be, because everyone is telling you, you
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can't. it kills your confidence. it kills the dream. announcer: when we come back, our road trip across america continues. >> i feel as most ampoor or diry don't even know we're alive. announcer: with a stop on the prairie band potawatomi nation reservation. announce: and later, who built america? >> without those 16,000 chinese workers, it would not have happened. don't settle. start your day with secret. secret stops odor- causing sweat 3x more. and the provitamin b5 formula is gentle on skin. with secret, outlast anything. no sweat. secret. all strength. no sweat. jason, did you know geico could save you hundreds on car insurance and a whole lot more? cool. so what are you waiting for? mckayla maroney to get your frisbee off the roof? i'll get it. ♪ (upbeat music) ♪ ♪ ♪
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[speaking his native american language] that means i am potawatomi. my indian name means big wolf, thunder clan, and my color is blue. jessica: they tell me they're living the american dream here on the reservation. but for mom, rosanna, it's complicated. rosanna: as a woman, i am kind of like not equal. as a native american, i am not equal. if i were a white woman, i would have it easier. a lot of things would be easier. i think i would be heard more. >> ♪ >> it means being heard. it means being able to express yourself and be authentic. jessica: onto kansas city, missouri, as the sun set over the jazz district, we caught up with singer jamie chase. [singing]
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jessica: her stage name, j love. jamie chase: music is my expression. it's my love. it's my heart. it's god's gift. jessica: we asked, does she feel a sense of belonging? jamie chase: musically, yes. but in my everyday life, no. if i am in the grocery store, everybody doesn't know that i am j love. i don't look the same. i got my hat on. i am just another black person. and i still have people following me around in walmart. sometimes i am cool with it. sometimes i am not nice about it. sometimes i'm like, 'hey, do you know it's probably not me that's stealing?!' jessica: the mother of two young black men, she wrote a song called "black lives matter." jamie chase: right now, i am fearful every time my kids leave out the door. i am fearful. 'where are you going and who are you going with?'
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some of my white friends will say, 'oh, this is not happening and it's not that bad.' this just hurts me to the core, when my white friends say, 'you know, you just need to stop talking about it. you just talk about it too much.' >> ♪ kevin mclaughlin: there's not a lot of compromise because we don't spend time to understand the other perspectives. jessica: from kansas city to st. louis, in the suburbs, retired navy pilot kevin mclaughlin. kevin mclaughlin: spending 31 years in the military and deploying six times, i feel most american when i am not in america and seeing how other countries and other cultures live. it really makes you appreciate what you have. jessica: mclaughlin, who led the 'missing man formation' as president george h.w. bush was laid to rest, says his years in
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the military taught him the value of all that makes up this country. kevin mclaughlin: the whole is much greater than the pieces that put it all together. >> things that would happen to me sometimes, i would say, 'oh, well, that's just america,' you know. but when you see your children, you're like, 'oh, no, we've got to stop this. jessica: our final stop, this african american children's bookstore, also outside of st. louis. jeffrey blair: i can travel through time, all through a book, and i can see myself in that. jessica: i.t. manager and former attorney jeffrey blair and his wife pamela opened "eyeseeme" five years ago, inspired by what their children, now in college, were missing. jeffrey blair: there are times in my life and my children's lives where there have been incidents that would take place that would have us question whether america values us. are we full citizens or just
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here as bystanders? this is one of my favorite books. it is called "the undefeated." this is for the unforgettable. the ones who opened a world of possibilities. i think one of the things is the possibility going forward, the possibility of hope and possibility of change. i think the idea of expanding the notion of freedom and who it applies to, to be the collective and not just the few, that that is what can give greatness to the ideals of what america supposedly stands for. this is for the undefeated. this is for you, and for you, and for you. this is for us, the undefeated. >> ♪ jessica: along i-70, i'm jessica gomez. announcer: when we come back.
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how the building of the transcontinental railroad changed america. russell low: it linked us physically, emotionally, financially for the very first time ever. announcer: and later, pulitzer prize winner nikole hannah-jones on her father's america. nikole: my father was like generations of black people who believed that service to their country was how they could finally get treated and recognized as full citizens. finally get treated and recognized as full citizens. attention, california. new federal funding of $3 billion is available to help more people pay for health insurance —
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photos bear witness to the painful struggles of african americans, indigenous peoples, and immigrant groups seeking to belong. they also bear witness to their contributions. enslaved african americans who built our monuments to democracy. iron workers from the six nations of the iroquoios raised and riveted the beams of new york's iconic buildings. perhaps the building of the transcontinental railroad represents one of the most important contributions of immigrants. their story is told by special correspondent ray suarez. >> ♪ ray suarez: as the civil war moved to its end, two massive construction projects picked up speed. [train whistle] ray suarez: immigrants and discharged soldiers headed west laying track across the plains starting in iowa, while a workforce of largely chinese immigrants laid track eastbound from sacramento across the sierra mountains. [train whistle]
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ray suarez: the 1900-mile route connected western pastures to midwestern stockyards and great plains farms to great lakes mills. but when the tracks were finally joined on may 10, 1869, here, in promontory point, utah, a closer look shows not one chinese worker in the historic photograph, out of more than 16,000. russell low told me he didn't grow up knowing about his family's connection to this great 19th-century drama. russell low: in fact, a lot of the story of my great grandparents wasn't known. this is 150 years ago. ray suarez: a great uncle was celebrating his 100th birthday. russell low: my sister walked up to him with her video camera running and she says, "tell me about your father, uncle kim." and he proceeded to break into a lecture at 100, unrehearsed, about the transcontinental railroad. at the end, he said they got a lot of chinese to come over here and amongst them was my father
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and my uncle. ray suarez: digging into his family history, low found this photo -- his great grandfather, the railroad worker. in 1903. many died, many were blinded or crippled by years of tunneling through mountains and building bridges spanning great valleys. once the railroad was built, these workers found their sacrifice hadn't earned a welcome from their new country. russell low: 1882, they passed this infamous chinese exclusion act. if you were here, you could never become a citizen. the most offending thing for many of these chinese was that they had been here for decades and they could never, ever vote, could not become a citizen. and in addition, if they ever left this country, you could never come back. and what that did was it separated families, not for a couple of weeks or a couple months, but for hundreds of years. ray suarez: and the chinese exclusion act hung on until world war ii.
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would you like to see the way we teach history changed so that the story is a fuller story to answer that question, "who built america?" russell low: that railroad they built truly changed this nation. without those 16,000 chinese workers, it would not have happened. it linked us physically, emotionally, financially for the very first time ever. and it had tremendous impact that we went from being able to take a cross-country trip of six months in a wagon train to just, you know, six days. that's phenomenal. ray suarez: i'm ray suarez. for announcer: coming up, the founder of the new york times 1619 project, nikole hannah-jones. nikole: people forget black americans were fighting in wars to democratize other countries and then coming home and facing brutal suppression of their own democratic rights. announcer: and later, meet the man who came to this country as
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soledad: i want to read you a passage of an essay printed in the "new york times magazine," a story of a young black girl growing up on the black side of an iowa town. "at the edge of our lawn, high on an aluminum pole, soared the flag, which my dad would replace as soon as it showed the slightest tatter." that little girl grew up to be a pulitzer prize winning journalist, writing about america's racial divide and issues of racial justice, in the process creating the acclaimed new york times 1619 project. i'm talking about nikole hannah-jones. you write about your dad flying that flag, and you talk about the duality. right. he's in mississippi, which has this track record of terrible violence against black people, but also that he loves america. nikole: i mean, my father was like generations of black people
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who believed that service to their country was how they could finally get treated and recognized as full citizens. people like to trot out stereotypes and statistics about black people. well, black people are overrepresented in the criminal justice system. black people are overrepresented in out-of-wedlock births. but the one statistic that they never seem to bring out is that black people are overrepresented in service to our country, that of all racial groups, we join the military and serve in the armed forces at the highest rates. and that is what my father did as well. and i think that's where people seem to forget, black americans were fighting in wars to democratize other countries and then coming home and facing brutal suppression of their own democratic rights here. and so, that was a claim that black people made even during slavery, that you are not going to tell us we can't be citizens of our own country. you're not going to tell us that we can't claim ownership over this land. and very outwardly, he was
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sending that message. announcer: next on "matter of fact," he is a broadway producer and emmy-nomina don't settle. start your day with secret. secret stops odor- causing sweat 3x more. and the provitamin b5 formula is gentle on skin. with secret, outlast anything. no sweat. secret. all strength. no sweat. hi, i'm debra. i'm from colorado. i've been married to my high school sweetheart for 35 years. i'm a mother of four-- always busy. i was starting to feel a little foggy. just didn't feel like things were as sharp as i knew they once were. i heard about prevagen and then i started taking it about two years now. started noticing things a little sharper, a little clearer. i feel like it's kept me on my game. i'm able to remember things. i'd say give it a try. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. start your day with crest 3d white and from mochaccinos to merlot, your smile will always be brilliant.
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soledad: these photos of border crossings along the rio grande of texas tell the continuing story of immigration. unaccompanied minors risking their lives to cross. to give voice to the undocumented, we enlisted a pulitzer prize-winning journalist, an emmy-nominated filmmaker, and tony-nominated producer. a man who grew up undocumented, who came to america as a child, and is now a leading voice for human rights for immigrants. he's the author of "dear america: notes of an undocumented citizen." jose antonio vargas: i was doing an event in wilmington, north carolina. and after this event, i was talking to everybody. and this woman, elderly black woman, approaches me and she
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said, 'mr. vargas,' i said, 'yes, ma'am.' and she had this bag, and she pulled this piece of paper from her bag. it's really old and crumpled. and she said, 'mr. vargas, my great, great, great grandmother gave me this piece of paper.' it was a bill of sale. she was a slave, her great great grandmother, a great, great, great grandmother. and she said, 'can you tell me the difference between this piece of paper that she got and the pieces of papers that you and your people can't seem to get? this is bigger than pieces of papers, mr. vargas.' she said, "think bigger." and she's right. when i think back to that moment, i think back to the fact that the history of this country is so complex. like, i can't talk to you about what it means to be an immigrant in this country without papers without talking to you about,
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you know, black people and how black people in this country who considered citizens. our stories are interconnected. and that elderly black woman is right. it is bigger than papers. it is bigger than laws. soledad: our thanks to all of our guests and all of you who watched. please join us every weekend on "matter of fact" where we always have conversations as diverse as america. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org]
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attention, california. new federal funding of $3 billion is available to help more people pay for health insurance — no matter what your income. how much is yours? julie and bob are paying $700 less, every month. dee got comprehensive coverage for only $1 a month. and the navarros are paying less than $100 a month. check coveredca.com to see your new, lower price. the sooner you sign up the more you save. only at covered california. this way to health insurance.
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today on asian pacific america, it is time to focus on the tokyo olympics and we start by talking with a bay area coach and athlete leading the usa team. he and his son. then we continue with our theme with fred weisberg of the northern japanese sword club with their upcoming show on august 6th through the 8th. we wrap up with the music. hello, i'm robert handa. your host for your show on nbc bay
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