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Stephen briefly celebrates America's great black historical figures. (01:35)
Jon Stewart's super PAC releases its first ad, Stephen reveals his plans for the South Carolina primary, and Scott Douglas fights to overturn Alabama's anti-immigrant law. (00:37)
Activist Scott Douglas advocates the overturn of Alabama's HB 56 anti-immigrant law and calls for a single, fair immigration law across the U.S. (05:58)
Author Melissa Harris-Perry deconstructs stereotypes of African-American women and considers the consequences of a white-male-centered perspective on the American story. (05:40)
Samuel L. Jackson explores Martin Luther King Jr.'s tremendous personal sacrifice and the pressures and dangers he dealt with on a daily basis. (07:56)
Ambassador Susan Rice explains U.S. involvement in Syria and Libya, and tells Colbert Nation what they can do to help with Somalia's humanitarian tragedy. (04:15)
In this unedited, extended interview, Susan Rice discusses the humanitarian tragedy in Somalia and tells Colbert Nation how they can help at an individual level. (03:42)
Rand Paul's approach to identifying terrorists is perfectly consistent with his libertarian constitutional ideals. (04:45)
People say Herman Cain is the Republicans' dark horse candidate, but Stephen doesn't see horse color. (01:08)
Michigan's emergency financial manager strips elected officials of power so they don't oppose his ideas to save money. (06:03)
President Obama makes his tax return public, and Donald Trump's special relationship with "the blacks" goes back decades. (05:11)
Governor John Kasich stirs the passions of Ohio's black community by appointing an all-white cabinet. (05:01)
Austan Goolsbee says that extending the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy won't pull the American economy out of recession. (07:18)
Eugene Robinson sees four categories of black America, and Stephen should feel threatened by all of them. (07:11)
The First Amendment guarantees all Americans the right to say what they want on the air without having their sponsors drop them. (04:41)
Nell Irvin Painter debates the meaning of white people and arm-wrestles Stephen over the Scots-Irish. (05:01)
Stephen doesn't see race, but he notices that Ujjal Dosanjh doesn't look Canadian. (06:39)
With his faint praise of Barack Obama, Harry Reid ushers the word "negro" back into the common parlance. (02:59)
Snoop Dogg works on his acting skills by reading a soap opera script with Stephen. (04:32)
Prevent your valid criticisms of Barack Obama from being unfairly associated with racism by putting on a little blackwashing. (06:29)