are we using power tools? will: i get the power tool thing. i want someone to show us, this is what i want some tips on, how about cleaning the pumpkin out? everybody shows you how to to make the designs, my least favorite art e part, the kids don t like the part of scooping rachel: really? my kids love that. will: getting it scraped so there s no strings on the edges. everybody likes to do the cutting and the designs, nobody likes the actual manual labor rachel: i bet if you went online, you could find the hack yesterday there was a hack about opening it from the bottom up. will: yes. rachel: i m going to try that this year. kids do love it. will: they don t finish job. i guarantee you sean finishes the job. todd: so this is what i have to look forward to with the little ones? will: you re super excited, and you will do rachel: most of the work. will: 70% of the work. todd: sort of like yesterday. yesterday all about the ponies, i can t wait we take her to the
stretched thin. their residents are living on fixed incomes in an inflationary climate, and the cold weather has set in, and they need fuel. fuel is rising, so they are directing their ear toward the tell contact party. todd: right. jennifer, what do you expect fetterman to do in this debate specifically when it comes to crime? he has a full record of being literally as soft on crime as one can be. that obviously isn t playing right now. what does he do in response? right. so i think what you re going to see is john fetterman try to win back some of the margin of working class individuals who have been not only impacted by economic, but by the crime situation. and if you look at any poll in pennsylvania, the number one thing vote ors want to know is not just about the economy and crime by by the way, education is also rounding out the top five but which candidate actually cares about me. so i think this debate is mehmet oz s to lose. is he going to punch up at john
up with it. really important point, so much irony in this. this was a pro-life, male speaker talking about the role of men in the pro-life movement. and the left is accusing him of murder. fascinating [laughter] very, very fascinating. and murdering minorities when we know that in the abortion the industry minorities are targeted, that in this city right here there are more aborted black babies than there are black live births. so don t talk to me about black lives matters and that the guy is brave to go on campus. i hope he keeps doing it because pro-life activists are being possessor do you wanted on a scale that i ve never seen in my lifetime. todd: this brings up a common theme with all of these stories. it always has leftists who think they know what the speech is going to be about, protesting that instead of what the speech is actually about. you think again, i m assuming
you want to bring in the information that you will then present at trial. so if it goes that far, you know, a lot of trials settle or get dismissed, things happen ors but highly possible that we are going to see this information if it goes to the final step. this could take a long time, people should be patient, but it s a really big step this judge has granted these plaintiffs. todd: i think the first offense is going to be executive privilege. it s possible. i would not expect these people to just show up and say, okay, i m ready now. i do think there s going to be a lot of legal wrangling and pushback from these focus. they re very high profile. they know anything they say this can be used is going to get a lot of eyeballs, a lot of attention. i would assume they re going to assert any kind of pushback they can in the form of privilege or anything else. rachel: shannon, real quick, i think i recall jen psaki actually at the podium talking about coordinate night with social media o
todd: keep going. will: i see. we re going to compete, and all of you are getting a head start. i ll be out there in a minute. all right. he s worth more than $13 billion annual revenues above $6 billion at his craft store chain hobby to to lobby, but ceo david green is giving all all ownership to put his faith first. here with more on his decision, hobby lobby ceo and founder and the author of a new book leadership not by the book, it s david green. david, i m excited to have you on the program. i d love to start with this. the headline right under you right now, there is text that says hobby lobby ceo gives up company for god. let me start with, please: what does that mean? that you re giving up the company? well, i think that it means we want to be stewards instead of owners. you can have an awful lot of problems with ownership.