this is a population of people who are just so used to wrestling with their identities and feeling. um you know, no sense of belonging, so being able to just look toward higher bodies of legal authority that are making some moves to affirm their rights, i think is kind of moving and order. that means that they would give schools the discretion. to sort of a case by case basis. i mean, i think that that s sort of the cut out there but that it s against the bit. i mean, look, it s good. the bands need to stop and i think that there is a federal place for stopping these bands and especially because these bands are i mean, there s no one is. i believe no one is protecting children here. this is about targeting a group. ah so i do think that s good. but there is this cutout, which used in a bad way could mean that the schools could still have these bands. uh something else, but yeah, those are there two different issues, though the supreme court refusing to uphold the virginia and then the
are bullied in their schools. so this is a population of people who are just so used to wrestling with their identities and feeling. um you know, no sense of belonging, so being able to just look toward higher bodies of legal authority that are making some moves to affirm their rights, i think is kind of moving in order. that means that they would give schools the discretion. to sort of a case by case basis. i mean, i think that that s sort of the cut out there but that it s against the bit. i mean, look, it s good. the bands need to stop and i think that there is a federal place for stopping these bands and especially because these bands are i mean, there s no one is. i believe no one is protecting children here. this is about targeting a group. ah so i do think that s good. but there is this cutout, which used in a bad way could mean that these schools could still have these bands. uh something else, but yeah, those are there two different issues, though the supreme court refusing to
don t know if it s a black and white except that you re working in your pajamas and slippers were in the office during all of those hours, and we weren t in pajamas. i mean, i was often wearing things that akin to pajamas because we were working so much, but, yeah, i just think that yes, it s true. there s not a boundary, but, um, it s more comfortable. yes and that is true pajamas and slippers but pajamas and a sport coat. yeah business on that i ve done. it s more like, um and do you guys are you guys happy that you were helicopter parented? um you know, mixed feelings. i m pro our current state of pajamas or at least like pajamas two days a week. i would say that just taking a step back for a second to i think this kind of invitation to rethink all these norms is also colliding with a lot of us feeling this kind of state of dread like there s you know, there s climate dread. there s gun violence. there s all these layers of crisis interacting and i think it s like asking a lot of us
has been closely watched, of course across the country and just to think about that. but also what we re seeing from voters as we saw what happened to wisconsin. yep it s amazing to see how that dobbs decision has just changed and shaped the national landscape on abortion. think it s changing and shaping . um you know, i don t think it s obviously it s not over yet. it s having a ripple effect that s still continuing throughout the country. it s interesting because we were talking a little earlier offline guys about this wall street journal. it s notable. it s in the wall street journal editorial board out with this piece this morning, saying, look at the races this week in chicago and wisconsin. we talked about him a lot on the show yesterday, guys. the wall street journal is calling this a five alarm fire for republicans, saying republicans better get their abortion position straight and more in line with where voters are. they will face another disappointment in 2024, pointing to, f
we re sad and then we get distracted and we move on. and just like everyone else says when will it? stop teacher? you mediate a lot of fights. if you could talk to the children, i guess at this point, what would you want them to know about how we should move forward and how we should handle the situation? and say to speak the truth and love and respect one another. are you worried at all being a teacher at this point going to school every day, maybe even thinking that tomorrow could be your school. i have been for a long time. i was a teacher. when sandy hook happened, those teaching kindergarten and all the parents look at you, like would you do it for my kid? yes, i would. but it s scary, and the moms who are here with little babies and children, my kids are grown now. um you know, they re scared. are they going to come home to their kids are their kids going to come home? how hard should we fight for this in terms of trying to make our kids even safer than what they are? i think we