they re just, you know,a they re just accounts and social media with a legacyou name of being major medi da. and you don t seem to care what they say. well, yeah mean,, i mean, you k, but, o i have learned not to care, butm of course, at the beginning, i do care. i did care because for me, i thought therw e were importan. now that i see they aren tarnedo cad since they are not treating us that well, i ve learned notre to care. and i think it s better because this and if you look atfor the ratings, for example, the amount of subscribers they have is really ridiculous. diculousmeani mean, the i mean,. watching them, really.it s l nobody watches cnn anymore.ik ws it s like i , i was we were talking yesterday about, you know, sad that we have e this new show of the new shows. of course, local and the, uh, news. i didn t did any a show in like
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the polls. of course it s smart for them te to harness this politically, butm they re saying things like contraception and same marriage are now going to be a threat and they re pointing to a line in a concurrence from . stice thomas but what he said if you go and read that is he says there is nothing in this opinion today, this abortion opinion that has anything to do with those rights. ill not him. mpact dth t it should not. but he doese go on to sayts that he thinks the court should engage in a different s kind of process for other cases moving forward. and he does mention reexamining a substantive due process rights in cases like kielburger film, which isig the one that made same-sex marriage legal in all 50 states. that signed on to this opinion today agrees there is no threat. threat there should be no threat. let.ng me read something from justice alito to those otherio key opinions. he says wens have stated t unequivocally that nothing in this opinion should be understood to cas
and their staff making quite inappropriate jokes about female colleagues and sometimes male colleagues to an extent. and it s. thankfully, i ve never had anything too severe, but it is a little uncomfortable to be hearing that when you are down the corridor from your office effectively or if you are in a bar, and that s one of the things come up a lot this week is the bars and how those facilitate lots of behaviour. and i saw margot shaking her head. before i bring you in, margot, i just want to ask you one more thing, eleanor, which is we framed our discussion at the top of the programme about power and how it can be abused. i wonder when you were early on in your career like you are, is it particularly hard to speak out when your career effectively depends on cultivating relationships with mps? i m very lucky that i ve got an incredibly supportive team and the second i say to my editor, like with an mp, i would not be comfortable, when i want them, they will deal with that. and have
i m very lucky that i ve got an incredibly supportive team and the second i say to my editor, like with an mp, i would not be comfortable, when i want them, they will deal with that. and have you said that to your editor about particular mps? yes, they re fully aware. butm goodness. yeah. but it is a bit tricky particularly as a small publication and as a younger journalist that you do think that i don t have necessarily the same impact that a journalist who s been doing this for 30 years might have. so, it s a lot more that the power is a lot more in the mp s hands and they re not picking up the phone for me affects me a lot more than it affects them. so, there is a bit of a power imbalance there when you re early in your career. and margotjames, let me bring you in. you were a minister in the dcms, but you were also an mp and now you are out of parliament. i wonder now, you know, reflecting on that little shift reflecting on that relationship between journalists and mps and how it