will: steve, you brought up north carolina state representative who brought this up to the school interviewed that representative and one onef the parents in wake county public school district. school.ley: valentine elementary will: this is what they had to say a little bit early. a lot of loving families comes in all different shapes and sizes. thank goodness for that kids need loving families right now more than anything else. i think when you are looking from a card and from a preschooler that has hes has a mommy hugging a daddy with a belly in his belly is not appropriate material. i m glad this brains pal in the district acted immediately. what parents want is transparency and they want parental rights. parental alienation has got to stop at the school board level. the school board is the one that sets the tone. and so, if we can get some parental rights brought back into schools. i m running for school board here in wake county because of this issue. and giving schools ba
drives home the point. look, a lot of loving families come in all different shapes and sizes and thank goodness for that kids need loving families right now more than anything else. but i think when you are looking at a card and from a preschooler that has a mommy hugging a daddy with baby in his belly. that s just not age-appropriate material to be showing preschoolers and i m glad that this principal and the district acted immediately. will: you asked three questions. you said number three, what can be done about it? i want to address that issue. because, i think what you have encountered here is not a school policy. this wasn t a curriculum approved are pa by the school or the school district. correct me if i am wrong about this. individual teacher imposing their thoughts, their ideology, really forcing it, shoe horning it into a totally separate legislative. that is something that is going to be hard to control there are teachers across this country who are doing that on that own
customs and border protection say it has turned away nearly two million migrants under title 42. the policy was set to end on monday. now to the baby formula shortage that seems to be growing more dire by the hour. tonight, more hospitals are reporting children needing treatment because they aren t getting enough nutrition due to the crisis. here s cbs jamie yuccas in los angeles. reporter: parents are becoming even more frantic as formula becomes nearly impossible to find. a lack of formula has sent at least four babies to a children s hospital in south carolina. an atlanta hospital is also treating children due to the shortage. would you describe this as a crisis? oh, absolutely. i have never seen anything like this. reporter: dr. mark corkins treated a toddler and a preschooler who were hospitalized at his facility in memphis this week. they had specific nutritional needs. they come in dehydrated. you give them i.v. fluids and