mr. blumenthal, aye. mr. blunt, no. mr. booker, aye. mr. boseman, no. mr. braun, no. mr. brown, aye. mr. burr, no. ms. cantwell, aye. mrs. capito, no. mr. cardin, aye. mr. carper, aye. mr. casey, aye. mr. cassidy, no. ms. collins, aye. mr. coons, aye. mr. cornyn, no.
mrs. blackburn, mrs. black burn, no. mr. blumenthal, aye. mr. blunt, no. mr. booker, mr. booker aye. mr. bozeman, mr. bozeman no. mr. braun, mr. braun, no. mr. brown, mr. brown, aye. mr. burr, no. miss cantwell, aye. mrs. capito, no. mr. cardin, aye. mr. carper, mr. carper, aye. mr. casey, mr. casey, aye. mr. cassidy, mr. cassidy, no. miss collins, aye. mr. cornyn, mr. cornyn no.
if they drive this content through the black box algorithms, it exposes the algorithms. it imposes transparency. parents will know what is happening to their kids and why it s happening. so i think the combination of information and control. good morning, senator blumenthal. i have a teenage daughter and about to be a teenage son. on behalf of a lot of parents, thank you to you and senator blackburn for taking up this critical issue. you have good bipartisan support around it. what does the future of the bill look like in terms of getting it passed, and what has been the reaction from the big companies? what have your negotiations with them been like? great question. first of all, we re very fortunate to have strong support from the chairman of the committee, senator cantwell, and also from others on both sides of the aisle. you know, if you sat through those hearings and closed your eyes and you heard the outrage expressed by my colleagues, you couldn t tell whether it was a
we re up to the challenge. tough to top. someone died. i think that a lot more people will die before we re done here, frankly. why? because people die every day. right? i mean, not a heart attack. vie violeolent death. people die violent deaths all the time. right? this is part of the reason that we won the state. the blacks are killing each other in staggering numbers from coast-to-coast. we don t want part of that anymore so the fact that they resist us when we say hey, we want a homeland is not shocking to me. all right? these people want violence and the right is just meeting market demand. one of the most notorious defendants started his closing arguments and argued he never planned to commit violence that weekend and didn t want violence. the plaintiff s attorneys showed text messages from cantwell, i m willing to risk a lot for our cause including
defendants started his closing arguments and argued he never planned to commit violence that weekend and didn t want violence. the plaintiff s attorneys showed text messages from cantwell willing to risk a lot for our cause including violence and incarceration. before charlottesville, the organizers told me part of the propaganda strategy was to look like their ideas were so powerful and so dangerous that the state had to violently suppress it. they wanted to go out there and i a reget arrested because it m them look like victims. it was essential to the property be propaganda strategy. they said they want to show their ideas are being violently repressed. this is cantwell at the scene