arget countries. and as he knows an important conference is taking place this weekend in south africa which i very much hope the prime minister will be able to attend. allen michael. number one, mr. speaker, thank you, mr. speaker. as the house will be aware today is the fifth anniversary of the seventh of july terrorist attacks on central london. i m sure everyone in this house, people in our country will remember where they were and what they were doing when that dreadful news came through. our hearts should go out to the families and friends of those who died. they will never be forgotten. and our thoughts are are those with those injured by the dreadful events of that day. it was a dreadful day. but it is also a day that will remain, i believe, a symbol of the enduring bravery of the british people. here. mr. speaker, i had meetings with ministerial colleagues and others in addition to my duties in the house i shall have further such meetings later today. mr. sp
i do not know the naacp was funding political candidates secretly in alabama or in some way launnering its funds to prevent people from knowinn thaa. i don t know how applicable that analogy is. i think it is an interesting question that the court has not quite gotten to, the issue of harassment and the issue of disclossre for harassment. it seems like that is a coming theme, but they hav not wressled to the ground yet. thank you. one of the more interesting opinions i saw, interesting because it was so unusually hard to decipher, was in the case of the juvenile justice parole case. chief justice roberts wrote a separate opinion. he did not join the majority in its reasing, where he basically said this may or may not be unconstitutional, depending on the circumstances. it was a real mishmash to me, logically, trying to figure out what circumstances would or would not apply in terms of his few of when life without parole for a juvenile offender would or would not be allowe