i ve been thinking about this and praying about that and got has been speaking to be telling me we need to do something for those poor souls in ukraine. i said if you look to go back t sleep the first thing in the morning, we will get right on this. so that morning when i woke up, i remember about two years ago at the auction in las vegas after this guy shouted to the crowd at that music festival an killed 60 some people, that deb they donated a car and it was a mustang, shelby super state. it was blue and white. and they raised 1 million bucks. and i was really impressed and they do a great job. so greg jackson and steve davis s car that he donated. so i set up in a car just like
frustration among the vaccinated. folks have tried everything. 2 million dollar vaccine lottery in mallory 1 million bucks in maryland. big screen tvs in arkansas. sometimes it takes conversations from doctor to patient. what do you think will work here? it s important to realize that vaccination maze were low and certain demographics prior to the covid-19 pandemic. our health care system hand build large demographics as part of the pandemic. hard disease killed more people than the covid 19 pandemic last year. these problems are baked into the cake. we need to address those fundamental issues because, people don t trust the system or trust a lot of the institutions because they see what happens day in and day out. i am a black physician, a black cardiologist. i talk a lot about disparities
hearing but a six hour hearing with nine effectively defendants. and all the attorneys representing those defendants and the defendants are themselves lawyers. plus there s the judge riding herd over all of them and they were all on zoom. it wasn t like they were all in the same room. so you could piece them together from their voices coming from different places. the court reporter in this case has been asked to do a plea heroic work. and when we finally get the transcript of that hearing, it s probably gonna cost 1 million bucks. and that moment with the court reporter spoke saying listen, you can be interrupting each other because i m just gonna get a bunch of dashes here. i ve never seen him all like that with the court reporter but she did heroic work today, that s for sure. you have to push a court reporter really hard before they get to that point. yes. thank you rachel. thanks lawrence. well, texas house democrats are, in the words of the great, on the road again. aft
indeed, you and me are we me and you singing in the park me and you, we re waiting for the dark have you got have 1 million bucks for a painting on your mantelpiece? this data or this run large or
$900,000, almost 1 million bucks in federal, state, city taxes that he got to keep that he should have been paying. the trump org and allen weisselberg pleaded not guilty and are expected back in court in september. as to what happens next in a criminal investigation, what this means for donald trump himself, i m joined by rebecca royfi who s now a professor at new york law school. rebecca, first just your first line reaction after reading the indictment today. this is an incredibly powerful indictment. it s detailed in such a way as it seems like it will be not too difficult to prove and, you know, i think, first of all, this really takes some of the wind out of the sails of that defense, if you can call it a defense, that this is a politically motivated prosecution. this is the bread and butter of the da s office. a case like this is what they