what we heard from the president today was a clear articulation of the stakes. this is about the future of the liberal world order, and we have to stand firm. jason: remember last year when the white house highlighted a 16-cent discount for your fourth of july? not this year. gas is up, interest rates are up, food is up. in fact, it s pretty hard to find anything that isn t more expensive than it was one year ago. this as the supreme court caps off a historic session with some of the most consequential rulings we ve ever seen. coming up, senator mike lee from utah who clerked for justice samuel alito on the high court and why the epa decision is as impactful as anything they ve ever ruled on. plus, america s crime crisis with violence this holiday. three police officers and a k-9 shot dead in kentucky. two people fatally shot and three officers wounded in texas. many chicago 22 in chicago 22 people were shot including 4 fatally in the span of just 20 hours. and crime is u
pictures of gay couples kissing and embracing under the headline equal dignity. the culmination of decades of activism that set off jubilation and airful embraces tearful embraces. many a times follow-up, there was revelry is and soul searching on gay pride day. such cities as new york city and san francisco promised a sort of social catharsis of bicoastal toast to the nation s rapid shift on gay rights and an extended curtain call for the movement that drove it. now, the washington post front page story said the decision rewarded years of legal work by same-sex marriage advocates and pointed to the vexing challenge now facing republican presidential candidates and the gop itself, how to get in step with modern america. we also looked at the coverage of the original 1973 roe v. wade decision, and while it was overshadowed by the death of lbj, it reflects that newspapers mainly took a just the facts approach. the washington post quoted the majority, then the minority