to learn from each other as it relates to those things. and i know that we have people here in this city that are dedicating their lives to stopping the violence. both in our police department and in the community. we have people in organizations. we have people in our churches that are helping, reaching out, trying to provide an opportunity for young people to go in the right direction instead of the wrong direction, offering mentoring services and others. i know that they are as frustrated as i am that the resources, the time, the money, the coordination are not yet yielding the results that we want. but we must press on. we must continue to press forward as a community. this is a community problem and it s a community issue that we can solve. let me mention a couple things. first of all, the lounge, the ultra power lounge, the abc has suspended the liquor license effective today. the city is going to be placing this property in our criminal abatement program and we will be
mandate but choose not to continue healthcare coverage. i d rather have a tax credit for somebody to buy the healthcare insurance they want than force them onto medicaid. medicaid is better than nothing. it doesn t help if you don t have enough money to pay the taxes that offset the subsidy. these are refundable tax across you get even if you don t pay income taxes. some republicans think it is too generous but the off-ramp they have chosen. that would be a subsidy. you make a really good point. the difference between a tax credit and the difference between what you pay in taxes and abatement thereof. if it s money in their pocket, that s something else. david, make a final point. you ve gone down a rabbit hole that let s matt get away with too much. i think he s done a good job.
us by god, and they all share one title in common, and that the title of hero. reporter: seeking out section 60, arlington national cemetery, the final resting place of those killed in iraq and afghanistan. he s looking down and is very proud. thank you so much. reporter: including second lieutenant robert kelly, the son of homeland security secretary john kelly, but back in the white house even amid the president s own high regard for his first foreign trip. i think we hit a home run no matter where we are. reporter: controversy with no sign of abatement and a clear sense that things are likely to get worse. the president s top outside lawyer marc kagswicz spot the sunday outside the white house as senior officials plot the path forward in an administration faced with a special counsel, multiple congressional probes and no shortage of unanswered questions. thank you, thank you.
conviction in the case of odin lloyd. now, all of this on the heels of a family donating his brain to science. they want this institute that studies football players brains to take a look to see if any dementia or football relatedness may have played a role. like cte. now, i also find it interesting that as we re learning more about his death and what is happening following the suicide, it s possible that his murder conviction of odin lloyd could be thrown out? massachusetts law allows for this thing called abatement. basically because he died while his murder conviction was being appealed, there is this possibility that they could move to have the conviction thrown out. essentially he didn t exhaust all of his appeals. so he has this chance to have the estate has the chance to have the conviction overturned. now, there could be a possibility that that would affect legal procedures down the
bruce, the exaggerations on the climate warm being alarmists, doesn t it hurt their case to make exaggerations like this? i don t think so. some of the people who came out and criticized what the president did were the pope, the vatican, and exxon-mobile, that doesn t really exxon-mobile? a threat to the entire planet, do you buy that? listen, i tell you what i buy. i think that donald has given false hopes when he was surrounded by the coal miners, maybe some temporary abatement in jobs that reduce, but there s 75,000 coal jobs in this country and 650,000 renewable energy jobs. i mean, there are caterpillar here in illinois where i am. they have a mammoth truck hauler that coal miners operate that will not will be driverless, technology is taking their jobs, not climate change. david: that s true and mike, there s been a big shift from