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Michael Phillips

๐Ÿ‘ค Speaker
745 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

That particular Berkshire conspiracy theory made a long-lasting impact on the American psyche. Cities across the United States banned fluoridated water.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Today, the John Birch Society is still active in North Texas, where recent gubernatorial candidate and car dealer Don Huffines has published anti-fluoridation essays on the Dallas Express, a right-wing website that repurposed the name of a historic black newspaper that went defunct in the 1970s.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Today, the John Birch Society is still active in North Texas, where recent gubernatorial candidate and car dealer Don Huffines has published anti-fluoridation essays on the Dallas Express, a right-wing website that repurposed the name of a historic black newspaper that went defunct in the 1970s.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Today, the John Birch Society is still active in North Texas, where recent gubernatorial candidate and car dealer Don Huffines has published anti-fluoridation essays on the Dallas Express, a right-wing website that repurposed the name of a historic black newspaper that went defunct in the 1970s.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Walker was a painfully dull public speaker. In the end, he couldn't bring his version of deliverance to his own state, finishing a distant sixth in the 1962 gubernatorial race. That would not prevent him and his allies from creating mayhem over the following months.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Walker was a painfully dull public speaker. In the end, he couldn't bring his version of deliverance to his own state, finishing a distant sixth in the 1962 gubernatorial race. That would not prevent him and his allies from creating mayhem over the following months.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Walker was a painfully dull public speaker. In the end, he couldn't bring his version of deliverance to his own state, finishing a distant sixth in the 1962 gubernatorial race. That would not prevent him and his allies from creating mayhem over the following months.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

He got arrested and was ordered to be psychiatrically evaluated by Attorney General Robert Kennedy after he incited racial violence during the integration of the University of Mississippi in September 1962. Adlai Stevenson, John Kennedy's ambassador to the United Nations, would confront Walker and a mob of his followers when the diplomat visited Big D on October 26, 1963.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

He got arrested and was ordered to be psychiatrically evaluated by Attorney General Robert Kennedy after he incited racial violence during the integration of the University of Mississippi in September 1962. Adlai Stevenson, John Kennedy's ambassador to the United Nations, would confront Walker and a mob of his followers when the diplomat visited Big D on October 26, 1963.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

He got arrested and was ordered to be psychiatrically evaluated by Attorney General Robert Kennedy after he incited racial violence during the integration of the University of Mississippi in September 1962. Adlai Stevenson, John Kennedy's ambassador to the United Nations, would confront Walker and a mob of his followers when the diplomat visited Big D on October 26, 1963.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Stevenson was shouted down as he attempted to deliver a UN Day speech to the Dallas Council on World Affairs. Mr.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Stevenson was shouted down as he attempted to deliver a UN Day speech to the Dallas Council on World Affairs. Mr.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Stevenson was shouted down as he attempted to deliver a UN Day speech to the Dallas Council on World Affairs. Mr.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

On the morning of November 22, 1963, Kennedy and his entourage felt foreboding as they prepared for a short airplane jaunt from Fort Worth to Dallas. The president just examined a full-page ad in the far-right Dallas Morning News that featured a bold-faced headline, Welcome, Mr. Kennedy to Dallas. The advertisement, paid for in part by H.L.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

On the morning of November 22, 1963, Kennedy and his entourage felt foreboding as they prepared for a short airplane jaunt from Fort Worth to Dallas. The president just examined a full-page ad in the far-right Dallas Morning News that featured a bold-faced headline, Welcome, Mr. Kennedy to Dallas. The advertisement, paid for in part by H.L.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

On the morning of November 22, 1963, Kennedy and his entourage felt foreboding as they prepared for a short airplane jaunt from Fort Worth to Dallas. The president just examined a full-page ad in the far-right Dallas Morning News that featured a bold-faced headline, Welcome, Mr. Kennedy to Dallas. The advertisement, paid for in part by H.L.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Hunt's son, Nelson Bunker Hunt, and the future owner of the Dallas Cowboys, H.R. Bumbright, featured accusations that Kennedy was soft on communism around the world and radicals at home, while persecuting conservatives who criticized him. The same morning, a group distributed leaflets designed like a wanted poster with front and side photos of the president with the caption, Wanted for Treason.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Hunt's son, Nelson Bunker Hunt, and the future owner of the Dallas Cowboys, H.R. Bumbright, featured accusations that Kennedy was soft on communism around the world and radicals at home, while persecuting conservatives who criticized him. The same morning, a group distributed leaflets designed like a wanted poster with front and side photos of the president with the caption, Wanted for Treason.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

Hunt's son, Nelson Bunker Hunt, and the future owner of the Dallas Cowboys, H.R. Bumbright, featured accusations that Kennedy was soft on communism around the world and radicals at home, while persecuting conservatives who criticized him. The same morning, a group distributed leaflets designed like a wanted poster with front and side photos of the president with the caption, Wanted for Treason.

Behind the Bastards
It Could Happen Here Weekly 167

How can people say such things, the president said to First Lady Jackie Kennedy. We're heading into nut country. Soon the Kennedys would make their fateful flight to Dallas, and the president would die from an assassin's bullet shortly after noon.