[S1E5] Ruling Days
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While kayaking, Wendy saw Bobby's bloated body at the Byrdes' boat dock. She and Marty forced to call the police after a failed attempt to hide the body. The local sheriff John Nix suspected the Byrdes are involved since Marty bought his business days before his death. While Marty was driving, Jacob stops Marty on his way and asked if he is the new owner Lickety Splitz, which he confirms. Jacob told Marty that Bobby was his business partner and subtly demand that Marty must works to him, which Marty refused since his employers won't allowed it. Wanted to know more about the Byrdes, Jacob and Darlene send Ash to spy on them. Meanwhile, Charlotte started working part-time at Blue Cat Bar and making friends with the Langmores while Buddy teaches Jonah how to use a gun.
Robert Fuller's death was initially ruled a suicide, but that conclusion outraged his family, who insisted that he would not take his own life. Locals, too, were skeptical, citing the area's troubled racial history. Thousands of people turned out in Palmdale in the days after Fuller's death to demand an independent investigation by California's attorney general into what many believed was a lynching.
Fuller's death occurred against the backdrop of the police killing of George Floyd and as Black Lives Matter protests ramped up. The situation was further inflamed days after Fuller's death when his half brother, Terron Jammal Boone, was killed during an interaction with LA County sheriff's deputies.
At the ranch, Beth's pushing to join Rip (Cole Hauser) and the cowboys for the cattle-wrangling trip up the mountain. He warns it'll be a brutal couple of days roughing it in the wilderness, but she's down. Carter is excited to saddle-up for the trek as well. John also invites Summer, who's not at all interested in participating in a trip that'll ultimately lead to bovines becoming hamburgers.
At police headquarters, Jared is in a hearing being interviewed about the events surrounding the ATF operation. They tell Jared that the ATF undercover said no shots were fired until after he and Michaela busted in, placing doubt on Michaela's story. Jared said the ATF guy had his timeline wrong and that he's confident in his testimony. The officers tell Jared his career is on the line and this is his last chance to change but Jared remains unmoved. The men prepare to leave and tell Jared to sit tight. The verdict comes back on Jared and he gets stripped of ten days pay. When he comes around the corner Vance is sitting on a bench and he realizes Vance is the reason he got off so easy. Jared asks what he wants and Vance says Jared must now report all of Michaela's actions to Vance. When Jared asks, \"Or else what,\" Vance just walks off chuckling.
At home, Grace answers the door to find Danny standing there. Grace tells him he can't be there but Danny says she gave him no choice. When Grace tells him she's trying to rebuild her marriage, Danny said it isn't about them, but Olive. He tells her that the day Olive was caught shoplifting, store security told her to call her dad and she dialed Danny instead of Ben. He discusses how they had been a family until 10 days ago. He says he knows because he's dealt with the loss of his wife, he'll get over losing Grace but he doesn't know how to break his connection to Olive.
Just days before the Entry-Level Driver Training (ELDT) requirements were to go into effect, the FMCSA announced a two-year delay. In this episode, we talk to three guests with stake in the ELDT program, and explore why they are unhappy with the delay and what they believe the consequences of this decision will be.
On Sept. 23, 1949, President Truman informed the nation of a startling new development: the Soviet Union, America's ally in World War II, had exploded a nuclear device. Once a friend, the USSR was now a foe, and the threat of its nuclear capability shattered the postwar return to normalcy. The event was announced a few days before a little-known evangelist named Billy Graham was scheduled to launch a crusade in the city of Los Angeles, home to film stars, sex and sin. Graham seized the moment, positioning Christian America against \"godless communism.\" He sought to save souls, but he also sought to save the nation.
But some Americans pushed back against this fusion of religion and patriotism. In Champaign, Ill., a self-described humanist, Vashti McCollum, challenged the widespread practice of \"release time,\" when public school students were \"released\" from academic instruction and allowed to receive religious instruction on school grounds. Her case, McCollum v. Board of Education, eventually reached the Supreme Court. In 1948, in an 8-1 decision, the court ruled the practice unconstitutional. The ruling gave rise to howls of protest and created a lurking suspicion that the court harbored a secret hostility toward religion.
In 1962, the Supreme Court made another controversial ruling in Engel v. Vitale. Brought by five Long Island families of Jewish heritage, the case challenged the longstanding practice of prayer in public schools. The court found in favor of the plaintiffs, once again unleashing an avalanche of criticism. In the years that followed, the court ruled on Bible reading in public schools, a moment of silence in public schools, and displays of a Christmas crèche in a public courthouse. To its critics, the court appeared intent on draining religious expression from public spaces. In fact, it was attempting to find a middle ground that protected religious minorities from unwanted expressions of and exposure to religious symbols and language.
On Sept. 12, 1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy addressed the Greater Houston Ministerial Association in response to alarm over the prospect of a Catholic president. Evangelist Billy Graham worked behind the scenes to support a Protestant campaign against Kennedy and encourage influential Protestant ministers to endorse Republican candidate Richard Nixon. Just days before Kennedy spoke in Houston, Graham organized a gathering of ministers in Washington, D.C. presided over by prominent Protestant preacher Norman Vincent Peale.
Near the end of his letter King asked: \"What else is there to do when you are alone for days in the dull monotony of a narrow jail cell other than write long letters, think strange thoughts, and pray long prayers\" Read an excerpt from the letter that includes King's famous statement about injustice: 59ce067264
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