workers are expendable. they are like an excuse, they are a shadow in the midst of what the left is doing. that s why everything is collapsing. no one has made a commitment and certainly they pretend to care about who they are in charge of, but this is particularly important and we must remove government from any kind of legitimacy from the nea, because we have kids now we know are behind two and three years because of missing one year, and nobody is thinking about how do we catch these kids up, that is who thinks about that. and that s why parents need to have power back and recognizing that they should be in charge of this money so that their children get what they need. harris: not just missing the year, but when they did try to learn on those devices, many of them could not do that. it takes a certain type of attention span to do that. my kids were getting headaches. i mean, seriously. they have covid money that the president says that a pandemic is over, let s spend that on gett
us heard that. it s a lot like what she talked about after the conservatorship ended, during that testimony that she gave. remember that was a 13-year court-ordered conservatorship that her father, jamie, was in charge of, and once that ended in november of 2021, britney really just started talking and revealing more and more, being more candid about what she went through. here s a part of the clip also that you may not have heard yet. if you re a weird, introvert, oddball like me, who feels alone a lot of the time and you needed to hear a story like this today so you don t feel alone, know this my life has been far from easy, and you re not alone. reporter: as i said, britney is really candid in this clip, very vulnerable talking about the trauma that she experienced. and she hasn t really opened up this way before, at least unedited. and we are able to hear the pain in her voice, hear the sadness,
indiana and we ll be having dozens of conversations with legislators from other states. she s really trying to tie this to the fight for voting rights which is something else the administration put are in charge of, as well as gun rights, saying look, these people, these republicans are trying to take away your rights and abortion are the same people going after these other rights that you have, and this is government interference. carlos, your thoughts on this, has she been effective? it s no secret that harris at a time struggled to find her footing as a vice president on some of the other issues. do you think this kind of rule is necessary for her, and has she been effective in playing it so far? i think the vice president normally had some missteps and got a lot of bad press. i think the president and his administration really didn t set her up for success. i mean, i think the first issue is she was assigned, was the border crisis. i mean, talk about setting someone up for fail
the united states, we had 220 last weekend. it is unheard of. you have to keep in mind, that japan is the most politically stable and the most consolidated of the g-7 democracies, it is very homogeneous, it is almost the single party democracy, the liberal democratic party which prime minister shinzo abe was in charge of, back in the day, they went almost every election, and they are about to again, today. because, he will benefit, the sitting prime minister from the country coming together. this will not be a moment that this unites or fragments japanese society, it will be a moment that brings the country closer together, they will be shocked but they will also feel as one, i mean frankly the last moment we have had like that in the united states, i hate to say it, was probably 9/11.
they have, we have 40 or 50,000 gun deaths a year, they have, there are years when they have two or three, what do you think this does to the japanese psyche? i think it is a shock. i think it is a jfk moment for japan, it is literally that cataclysmic, the entire 2021, japan had one violent gun death, non-suicide in the country, the united states, we had 220 last weekend. it is unheard of. and you have to keep in mind, that japan is the most politically stable and the most consolidated of the g-7 democracies, it is very homogeneous, it is almost a single party democracy, the liberal democratic party which prime minister shinzo abe was in charge of, back in the day, they win almost every election and they are about to again, today. because they will benefit.