representative of the libyan people. not if you have for maine republican senator susan colins who said in the written statement, we still know little about the opposition and it concern mess that eastern libya has been a source of foreign fighters in iraq and recruits for al-qaeda. u.s. officials say one reason they took so long to recognize the council is to make sure gaddafi wasn t replaced by someone worse. they are concerned they have seen no reprisal in the opposition fighters and the willingness to work with the supporters that don t have blood on their hands. stath department spokesman said they have seen nothing to show they re acceptable to extremists. it doesn t want a state led by extremists. it wants support of the human rights for all libyans. the u.s. is trying to transfer $1.5 billion in
found on those paper towels i guarantee that would have been the first thing the state led with if they had. but they didn t give you any of that. in stid they gave you more speculation upon speculation. guess upon guess. they want you to fill in the gaps with your anger and your emotion. that is what they want and they are hoping that if you talk about maggots you will think dead body. well, you heard dr. huntington and dr. haskell talk about these insect activity, it is amazing how much information you can get. right down to the time of death in some cases. well, they had that opportunity on july 16 and would have answered all questions if they had taken dna from those maggots. dna, see, if a maggot is feeding on human tissue it
the same way, then, the whole law is done, right? guest: i think it is. and i heard a little bit of greta moves comment, they could have addressed this by making some of it severable but the point is at least in my mind, the law it self, it was appropriate to challenge it. health care is a legitimate issue but from wyoming s perspective we don t want it addressed in the national level in this global fashion. the states have an opportunity and in my mine, a duty, to address this themselves, to make sure that we have better access to health care but the way this was approached in the only was unconstitutional but was bad policy so if it is thrown out that would be an improvement but the better course of action is for it to be state led rather than from the federal government neil: you may get your wish, governor, thank you very much. good to have you on. can you imagine being just a doctor trying to sort out what he or she does right now?
standardizing the way kids are taught in public schools? well, good question. this is not an effort to standardize how they are taught, but effort to make sure they are held to certain expeck taktss, expectations that make them ready for work and careers when they leave high school. this is about getting the expectations right, and not standardizing how they are taught. how is this different from no child left behind? well, different in two ways. first of all no child left behind is a federal program. this common core standards initiatives is state-led. it was done without federal participation, and no federal money or programs. this is all about the states. and secondly, many people believe that no child left behind encouraged states to keep the standards less rigorous than they need to be. the common core standards are all about setting rigorous standards so that students are well prepared when they complete high school and learn what they need to learn along the way. how doe
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