We have not moved the needle enough. It is time for wisconsin to join the rest of the country and realize that this is something that is important. This is one of those tragic issues. I remember, years ago, when i was first elected, one of the most heartwrenching cases we had to talk about was a family from our area that had lost a son because of a multiple, repeat offender. The problems are not just the numbers, it is the number of people who have been out multiple times committing drunk driving. I agree with the attorney general candidates that the first time offenders, criminalizing that is not the answer. It is going after repeat offenders, toughening up the penalties. I think this is an issue that republicans and democrats can come together and work on. For me, it is one of those where i will work with Law Enforcement and the police. I have endorsement of the men and women in the Milwaukee Police association, and the troopers association. They are the people on the road to underst
Land safely. In a missions darkest moment trust mid continent instruments. Now, for the first time on tv, the stories and reports of the people who fly, and the aircraft they fly. And you are invited in an exciting, housebumping, new Television Series designed for everyone who has ever gazed skywards and dreamt of slipping the bonds of earth this week on the aviators, we take a look at the russian mig15. We explore the legacy and influence of the cessna brand. We take a look float training in the winter on canadas west coast. We talk to legendary aerobatic pilot patty wagstaff. And we go inside a simulator to learn how to land an airliner. From the boundary bay airport, this is the aviators. Im jeff lewis and im the pilot on the mig15. The aviators staff correspondent jeff lewis, codename biscuit, has a passion for aviation. Normally on the aviators, jeff is a field correspondent. But on todays show, he is the subject of a segment. We caught up with him just before one of his air show
A lot of time on your boat. Theres a very strong subsistence culture here. People fish, they hunt, they live off the ocean, of what the land gives them. Theres a very, very strong connection between the people here and wildlife. Its certainly a heritage from the tlingit, the alaska natives. If we look around, it seems like time has stopped and nature took over. Thats what life is all about here, on Baranof Island. john straley we are in the archipelago of southeastern alaska, on Baranof Island in sitka, alaska. I love the fact that we live on a contiguous temperate rainforest. And i believe that its one of the last great treasures on earth. Sophie Fouron john straley. Poet and author, the untamed nature in alaksa have inspired both his poetry and crime novels. Having settled on baranof some 35 years ago, this is his island. john straley this place on the outside of baranof is the ancestral home of the tlingit people of sitka. In the late 1700s, russians and aleut people came to harvest