accelerated the purchases. i don t think we have an issue with demand. i think incomes are strong, retail sales are strong, companies have lots of money. the problem is the supply-side end unless we fix the supply-side it will contaminate demand-side. supply destruction and inflation. trace: one of the biggest indicators is gas prices, i tell people outside the door it s $5.65 a gallon. on one hand you have the president tapping oil reserves adding 50 million barrels of oil to the market and on the other hand he wants to make it more expensive to drill for oil on federal property. how do you square the two. were in a very funny. where we have a transition issue, were moving away from fossil fuel, coal, oil.
it is apparent by looking at the crime scene and what we have seen so far of the crime scene, that these officers were under a tremendous amount of gunfire from this individual and yet they continued to move forward against this target and engage him and eliminate that threat saving numerous lives throughout this community. in the back with the camera? can you talk about the type of weapons that your officers had? were they small arps or were any of them equipped with assault weapons to attack this subject? absolutely. all patrol officers in chattanooga are armed with a duty weapon a side arm, which is exactly like the one i m wearing right now. it is a six-hour .45 caliber and 5.65 millimeter ar-15 type or comparable patrol weapon. can you talk about the type
the suit claimed that dominos would pay workers the minimum tip wage, $5.65, even when they did higher paid minimum wage work like kitchen prep work. on friday, the domino s delivery workers won. the settlement was $1.3 million. it will be divided among the 61 workers who were part of the lawsuit. david melton responded. we made some mistakes in our business. what he calls mistakes seem to be a common practice in the fast food business. more than four in five workers, 84% of them reported being victims of wage theft. more than a fourth report having to work off the clock.
typically they re an m-16, and then later an m4 carbine. and an m4 carbine fires a 5.65 millimeter at about 3,000 feet per second. when it hits a human body, the effects are devastating. it s designed to do that. and that s what our soldiers ought to carry. i personally don t think there is any need for that kind of weaponry on the streets, and particularly around the schools in america. what is your message to the nra, to members of the house judiciary committee, republicans, who say this isn t a topic for federal legislation? i think my message is we ve got to look at the situation in america. the number of people in america killed by firearms is extraordinary compared to other nations. and i don t think we re a blood thirsty culture. so i think that we need to look at everything we can do to safeguard our people. general stanley mcchrystal, former commander of u.s. forces in afghanistan and before him
typically they re an m-16, and then later an m4 carbine. and an m4 carbine fires a 5.65 millimeter at about 3,000 feet per second. when it hits a human body, the effects are devastating. it s designed to do that. and that s what our soldiers ought to carry. i personally don t think there is any need for that kind of weaponry on the streets, and particularly around the schools in america. what is your message to the nra, to members of the house judiciary committee, republicans, who say this isn t a topic for federal legislation? i think my message is we ve got to look at the situation in america. the number of people in america killed by firearms is extraordinary compared to other nations. and i don t think we re a blood thirsty culture. so i think that we need to look at everything we can do to safeguard our people. general stanley mcchrystal, former commander of u.s. forces in afghanistan and before him general colin powell, former