gary had always pulled things off. he gary had been through everything, plane crashes, car wrecks, bar fights. anything you could think about a guy could live through, he lived through. and he came and he did his job and we loved it. the biggest thing about that show to me is that the fans came out. they loved it. i m one of the proudest members of this band because every night that i climb up there, i give it 110% every night. and i know that johnny does and i know the rest of the band does, you know. because when you look out there and you see everybody singing the songs, i mean, that s incredible. this band as we all know has been faced with a lot of tragedy. mr. saturday night johnny spoke to me about that day in 1977 when he picked up the phone to learn that his
researchers argue the same fate awaits us unless we identify the destructive attributes within ourselves and do something about it. kat has acknowledged it s time to stop crashing wakes to take advantage of the open bar. tyrus has realized cannonball pluralists cause tidal waves cannonballs cause tidal waves. dana admitted starting bar fights never helps anyone. and tucker has killed livestock to make a documentary on someone killing livestock. all right! tucker, this is your wheelhouse but how do you explain all of those mysterious ufo footage and what about the mutilation of the cattle anyway? it s all real, actually. i don t know what to say and my producers mocked me. john cougar in charge of our document arrays. i don t want to see cattle
dana has admitted starting bar fights never helps anyone. and tucker has killed livestock to make a documentary on someone killing livestock. [laughter] okay, tucker, this is your wheelhouse, any mysterious ufos on camera and that footage and what about the mutilations on the cattle an anyway? tucker: it s all real, actually. it is. i don t know what to say, and my producers mocked me, charlie cougar is in charge of a documentary, and how mutilations and he gives me this look like settle down, alex jones, that s going too far. and he goes out there and spends months on it and comes back and he has this kind of come you know, he goes oh, no, it s real, 100%, nobody knows what it is, i never believed in anything like this. i actually believe the warren commission five years ago, that s how dumb i was.
in this case the elderly more so seems to have greater impact on older generations. you can see why. it s not an op civil miserable day if you are just struggling to get through it on a good day, you can understand how that mounts up as well. there s all the knock off effects, there is the stress and the fear. they looked at vietnam over a one year of drought wellness scores fell by 11%. this is something gallup hopes that lawmakers and policymakers look at. it s not just measuring physical changes in rainfall patterns, it s human health, it s wellness and studies have shown that when it gets hotter high vent crime goes up, bar fights go up, p sat scores go down and so all of the bad stuff about being human is exacerbated by this and as the heat goes up this is something to manage. we are witnessing, experiencing or having to live through so many more of these
carry a gun in public just as you had a constitutional right as of 2008 to have one number home. and that s a big difference. you know, it s one thing to allow people to keep guns in their homes where obviously, you know, there are many threats in a home, accidental shootings, children getting ahold of weapons. but now that you have a constitutional right to carry one in public, bar fights, road rage, gang issues, i mean, this is a whole new dimension of opportunities for trouble, but also, i should point out, it is also an opportunity as justice thomas points out for people to engage in self-defense. that s the right he says people have, and that s why the constitution requires that all of us have the right to carry a gun in public.