conditions. michael, this seems likeit a proactive decision to finally go after these corrupt prosecutors by state officials . what do you say? interesti i think it s a very. interesting thing. bothact, what we see both in los angeles and in st. louis is you see people resistingthe o the prosecution agenda, speaking out for the first timka e in the case of missouri.attemp ti the ag is attemptingo to remove the district attorney from officeve the. what that district attorney has done is the same thing that radicamel radical progressive san ecutors have done in san francisco and los angeles, which is basicallyand los to lt people out, not require that noq people be held in jail for alleged crimes. and the result is repeat crimes. offenses. i mean, the on, the e ingu st. , the guy in question had had violated the electronic monitoring 50 time violates befe the accident. so, i mean, you have this just repeat offensive. orneys ae you have these district attorneys that are basically a
a little bit over three years ago and i put al al ofstorage my documents from congress into a storage facility back in wisconsin. no one has looked at them since then.econgress. but it s interesti since i left congress.ng that u but it s interesting that you have a lawyer, mr. bauer,h high powered , high paid lawyer going through joe biden sdocume documents. v something must have promptede that. what do you think would havethin woul that would have brought a lawyer to go through joe biden documents? i don t believe anything they ve told us about this scenario. t thcenario and how these docume discovered, but we were led to believe that they were moving out of these penn biden center offices. and that s what promptedocuments the discovery of these documents. but the interesting fact, sean,b that s kind of been buried a little bit is the fact that they were the first tranche of i documents were found inke a folder. so it was marked personal.ntil joe and so i think until joe biden answ
that kushner offered for the absence of any american institutional investors in kushner s fund was that he would like to avoid media attention. he testified before the january 6 committee. did the saudis buy that? it s pretty pretty interesti. i can imagine that kushner was trying to keep a low profile at this point in time. remember, nicole, one thing striking about this story is the documents we re quoting from are dated late june of 2021. by that point in time, it s less than six months after kushner left his white house job and he s already well under way with this saudi deal. presumably he s been to riyadh to discuss the deal, provided a pitch book and all the particulars. that would have been weeks if not months prior in order to pull that information together and give the saudi fund time to consider it. it s possible that he was hoping to lock them in as a cornerstone investment which is what he ultimately got. they became the anchor, if you will, the cornerstone of the deal a
also a political problem for this administration as we head closer to the midterm elections and what the white house is trying to do over the last several weeks is try to lay out a different thing it might try to do to try to lower gas prices in the long term. we are talk about things like raising global supplies. we know theed a ed administrats begun conversations to try to bring in more oil from those kinds of countries. there is an interesti ing die flamic. yesterday when we saw the president rolling out this import ban, he said in his remarks, i m going to try to do everything that i can to try to minimize the impact on american consumers. hours later we saw him land in texas for an event and telling a report there, can t do much right now on rising gas prices. i just asked white house press secretary jen psaki, which are the two is it?
we are live at haohio after fourth presidential debate. let s bring in present and real yang depressed off the stage. we re talking about our core issues, the fact that where the emost common jobs in the econom including hundreds of thousands right here in ohio. 4 million throughout the midwest . now we need to move our economy forward if we re going to have any chance of coming together. one of the most controversial . when you talk about the legalization of some opioid sit pestruck people is an interesti thing to say. heat only that his classmates had been patches on their arms they were already addicted and what could we do.n would have other countries done in this situationn some of them have massive successes with