U. S. Military our u. S. Military to get out. Who did that . Which country and why were going to tell you im rick sanchez. This is direct impact. The. This is a seismic event in global politics. Bottom are put in the victory in the russian president ial election, wasnt just a when it was a land slide. Mr. Potent has secured another 6 year term is russias president solidifying his grip on power for the foreseeable future. This when, by a whopping 87 percent. Thats a big number, which naturally makes one ask, is he really favored by that Many Russians . I think you know what, thats a fair question. So lets check the numbers. And the only way to really do that is, is to look at what legitimate poles have been taken. Right . Real poles. What, what did the ping in other words, what did the people of russia say before the election . Okay, here it is. Weve got a graphic for you. Take a look at this graphic. This is from a statistic, one of the most respected worldwide researchers and page sto
There that, it would not have been done there, that it was not according to the rules, nor it, so to speak, was not respected for safety. Yes, yes , to say it, he found himself in a manly mancourageously. And in my opinion it is very worthy to say it directly, but , unfortunately, we know such things that they exist. We have e in the country and today they are beginning to cause a much more vivid reaction of the population. What it was, lets say, in peacetime, so it seems to me that the authorities should in this sense. Eh, so to speak , be very attentive to what is happening here, as they say, you need to understand that this can very loosen our opponents inner counts on the sixth. They count on this precisely this main goal. They, as they say, they understand that a country like russia can only from within. To be defeated like it is in the soviet Union Happened and in this sense, so to speak, their goal, so i think thats especially on the eve of the president ial campaign. I can see
History of reproductive rights and justice starting from the 19th century to the present. Its also something thats in some ways very hard to lecture about now because its i as as professor lawson said in one of the main historians of this stuff, and im also living through it with all of you. So its a strange time to be discussing this as■z history whn its also very much real life. So i think now often when we think of reproductive rights and we think of them in the context of criminalization and criminal laws, but thats a relatively recent phenomenon. So if you go back far enough and theres a dispute about this that was reflected by the supreme in the Supreme Courts decision in 2022 in dobbs versus jackson, Womens Health organization, the majority led by Justice Samuel alito suggested that in the United States to some degree, another abortion had always been a crime. Any point in pregnancy, he might have said or might have believed something similar about contraception. But the reali
So this is obviously more material than i can cover in an. So this is a snapshot of the history of reproductive rights and justice starting from the 19th century to the present. Its also something thats in some ways very hard to lecture about now because its i as as professor lawson said in one of the main historians of this stuff, and im also living through it with all of you. So its a strange time to be discussing this as history when its also very much real life. So i think now often when we think of reproductive rights and we think of them in the context of criminalization and criminal laws, but thats a relatively recent phenomenon. So if you go back far enough and theres a dispute about this that was reflected by the supreme in thes decision in 2022 in dobbs versus jackson, Womens Health organization, the majority led by Justice Samuel alito suggested that in the United States to some degree, another abortion had always been a crime. Any point in pregnancy, he might have said or m
History of reproductive rights and justice starting from the 19th century to the present. Its about now because its i as professor lawson said in one of the main historians of this stuff, and im also living through it with all of you. So its a strange time to be discussing this as history when its also very much real life. So i think now often when we think of reproductive rights and we think of them in the context of criminalization and criminal laws, but thats a relatively recent phenomenon. So if you go back far enough and theres a dispute about this that was reflected by the supreme in the Supreme Courts decision in 2022 in dobbs versus jackson, Womens Health organization, the majority led by Justice Samuel alito suggested that in the United States to some degree, another abortion had always been a crime. Any point in pregnancy, he might have said or might have believed something similar about contraception. But the reality was that for much of ited states history, either passing o