Are eight definite. Definites. And there are others out there. But there are some republicans who are opposed, even though some republicans have said they would vote to proceed with the bill, at least move to an open debate on it. But it has they have two weeks coming up to get it done. Host some of those republicans up in 2016. What happens then . The senate, if they are able to get it done, what happens in the house deco house . Emma dumain i was going to say, the numbers in the house tricky. There are more members obviously. If you are not the whip, it is harder for vicki and i to even put the numbers on the table about where people are. A few of the House Democrats i was speaking to lessig who are either for or against tpa and are being very vocal about it said, you know, very few democrats have very few democrats are get to make up their minds. That is to say, there are a very few number of democrats who are for it or against it. And no those are the members that president obama a
Its a makes them able to better perform their mission. As A Justin Sapp talked about, there is a number of basic skills that we want our soldiers to be able to do. We want them to able to shoot and hit a target. They want them to be able to maneuver in environments. Those are the essentials of any military operation. When you overlay that on top of the complex world we live in, we want our soldiers to be able to operate and decide it is not whether youre going to hit the target, it is whether you should shoot or not shoot. The able to make decisions rapidly in a complex environment. That is what we are trying to achieve. Host you talked about civilian and military together. One of the replicas here is a metro station. Why is it important to have that and how do you account for civilian dealing with civilians in the sky situations . Guest our soldiers have to be able to operate in all kinds of environments. What you saw it on their looks like a metro station and weve used it in the past
You are here: Home / Missouri Senate to hear bipartisan legislation on Wednesday on faith-based boarding schools; Householders remain jailed without bond
Missouri Senate to hear bipartisan legislation on Wednesday on faith-based boarding schools; Householders remain jailed without bond
Bipartisan legislation aimed at regulating faith-based boarding schools like the now-defunct Circle of Hope Girls’ Ranch in southwest Missouri’s Humansville will be heard Wednesday by a Missouri Senate committee in Jefferson City.
State Reps. Keri Ingle (D-Lee’s Summit) and Rudy Veit (R-Wardsville) testify before a Missouri House committee in Jefferson City on February 10, 2021 (file photo courtesy of Tim Bommel at House Communications)