realizing that the history goes back to the 80s. where he has been pulling this kind of thing, and i don t mean to use that language. he has been raising funds to protect the vote for decades. and no one has stopped him. there has been true the vote, but that end up being tried here and dismissed by the attorney general here. so i think that the more successful the groups are the more they will be. you raise such an important point which is, some of the efforts predate donald trump. it s just that donald trump with his big megaphone, and his influence actually gives them more legitimacy, more juice, and turbo charges them. we keep having this conversation about what it is going to take to roll out the big lie. to get people to buy back in. and part of it, i think your answer is, follow the money. well, i think it s follow the money but i also thought about this since, that i think that the lawsuit brought quite to get people to buy back in. and part of it, i think your
our military identity, don t we? and the type of recruitment videoeo they re producing these days. now, during reagan. in the 80s, the videos look like this reaching deep inside you. things you haven t done rough going what you have long. h we do more before 9:00 a.m. than most people do all day. they first sergeant and they want to go back to the 80s unabashedly patriotic, totally cool. well, this is how they recruit. today is the story of a soldier who operates donations, patriot missile defense systems. it begins in california with a
discussion with their clinician to see if aspirin is right for them. the use of aspirin goes back to the 80s and 90s when we were not really that focused on blood pressure and high cholesterol. i remember, i can ashley remember a long way back my granddad giving me half a to sprint when i was a young kid. he thought it was like a vitamin and that sort of established in people s minds, didn t it? ., ~ ., ., of established in people s minds, didn tit? ., ~ ., ., , ., didn t it? you know, that use of asirin didn t it? you know, that use of aspirin because didn t it? you know, that use of aspirin because it didn t it? you know, that use of aspirin because it was didn t it? you know, that use of aspirin because it was available | didn t it? you know, that use of. aspirin because it was available or is available over from a pharmacy makes access easy. but what is now recognised perhaps because we treat hypertension or high blood pressure more aggressively perhaps we now have statins th
girls. what did you think, really. that we wouldn t get girlfriends. that we would sit in the basement and play games for the rest of our lives. ya, i guess i did. obviously this is a innocent scene about a child going through growing pains. people in social media said will buyers is gay. then a reporter con fronted the 14-year-old boy playing will and asked him the question. the actor said i justin they were rett it as he s not ready to grow up he wants to grow up and play in the basement like old times. why must we sexualize kids, laura. one of the best known kids in the world because of this television show and the success of it. laura: everyone should know, if you haven t seen the show, it takes us come back to the 80s. 80s. laura: everything seems a lot simpler in many ways in the 80s there. is a hunger for simpler times
what i m talking about is let s give everybody who makes under $100,000 credit for reparations. i m saying that some form of reparations, what i m hearing is that there would be some form of money, probably a tax credit or something like that to say we did that. i think it s reparations for slavery. martha: what form does it take? better education? tax credits? the actual argument, these things have been introduced in the congress going back to the 80s and have never gone anywhere. it s not something that s real. martha: he talked about the fact he feels slavery was a grave wrong was not as bad for