rich? hey, good afternoon, charles. john fedderman s campaign is hosting his watch pear here in the pittsburgh area tonight. fedderman won t be there. he s been in hospital since friday with a stroke. his campaigned released the statement saying john fedderman is about to undergo a standard procedure to implant a pacemaker with a defibrillator. should help protect his heart and address the underlying cause of his heart by regulating his heart rate and rhythm. his campaign released this photo showing the progressive democrat cast an emergency absentee ballot from the hospital in lancaster. he expected to be back soon on the campaign trail that only happens if his wins his primary today. he s against congressman conor lamb. he s a centrist candidate. the top tear republicans voted in peer today. dr. mehmet awed and david mccormick and kathy barnett. president trump released a robo call asking people to vote for dr. oz. barnette hit back. he s not jesus. so he gets to be wro
away. charles: representative gallagher, your colleague just mentioned, you know, russia, china, we know that they ve made some pretty big advances in things like hypersonic missiles, for instance. if we re seeing videos of these objects flying in the sky at speeds that nothing that we have can match, how worry should we be from a self-defense standpoint? well, even if you separate the u.a.p. and even if you separate some of the most extreme incidents like the incident that we had navy top gun pilots citing things that somehow defied the law of physics in some ways. we know the russian and chinese have made major advancements in hypersonics. we had a chinese test that appeared to catch the intelligence community by surprise last year. that s not acceptable. we aren t moving fast enough to win this technological and defense race, particularly with the china communist party. we ve gotten complacent in recent decades and we subscribe to this naive belief that we can convince the commu
$5,000. man, i would blow your [ bleep ] head off if i could afford it. i m going to get me another job. i m going to start saving some money, and you a dead man. you better hope i can t get no bullets on lay-away. not far from where charleston heston and i grew up is a training ground for the michigan militia. why do you use the bowling pins. from a self-defense standpoint, it is a small target. it also represents the vitals on a human being should you ever have to shoot at one. the michigan militia became known around the world when on april 19th, 1995 two guys living in michigan who had attended militia meetings blew up the federal building in oklahoma city, killing 168 people. the michigan militia wanted everyone to know that they were
for. the point is they don ta hrk o mara drove home. its doesn t matter whether the injuries were actually life-threatening as long as zimmerman reason my believed the were. shepard: around this time of day they take a break in the testimony and they ve done so now. i m going to continue to talk to the lawyers. this matter of who was on top of whom is at the crux of all this, and what they re trying to establish here, the prosecution is trying to say, this man chased after our after this man, and he defended himself, trayvon martin did, and as he was defending himself, zimmermansome shot him and killed him and that s why they say this is murder in the second degree. right. that s the whole theory of the prosecution s case and its falling short. the issue isn t whether or not from a self-defense standpoint. the fact that zimmerman got out of the car when he didn t have to, and trayvon martin was armed only with skittles-isn t the whole argument. the argument is, when they came t