quote, insane and inappropriate. fast forward to december of last year, when the select committee released its final reporting, that report actually included a very interesting detail. the days following the 2020 election, donald trump apparently personally asked a representative in michigan to reach out to other state lawmakers and gauge there is support for questioning the integrity of the election results. and at the beginning of this year, she announced that she is reopening the state investigation into the fake electors scheme, citing a lack of movement from the doj. and that brings us to what happened this week. on tuesday, nestle formally announced charges against the 16 fake electors with each defendant facing a felony count, including forgery, related charges. each punishable up to 14 years in prison. nestles office as the investigation is ongoing, and hasn t really ruled up
that we had, and what i more nostalgic for the control and the values that we had. people talk about the winter of discontent and the excesses of the trade union movement as it s styled and as it s caricatured by the press, which was extremely hostile. i m nostalgic for the balance that we were creating. i think society was becoming rebalanced in the 70s. thatcher not only crushed the trade unions, she brought in the big bang. she got rid of paternalism in companies. when you worked at a factory, notjust in bournville, in cadburys, but nestles as we used to call it in west london where i used to work, any of the brewers, any of the factories had football fields, social clubs. some of them had housing. my first house i bought was a railway house, provided by british rail and provided by the great western railway. all of that has gone. people now disregard the workforce as something that s under their shoe in some ways. not if you re an office worker, but if you re doing refuse collecti
thatcher not only crushed the trade unions, she brought in the big bang. she got rid of paternalism in companies. when you worked at a factory, notjust in bournville, in cadburys, but nestles as we used to call it in west london where i used to work, any of the brewers, any of the factories had football fields, social clubs, some of them had housing. my first house i bought was a railway house, provided by british rail and provided by the great western railway. all of that has gone. people now disregard the workforce as something that s under their shoe in some ways. not if you re an office worker, but if you re doing refuse collection, if you re doing care services, if you re doing manufacturing, in many ways you are an inconvenience and we re waiting to automate you out. that s the problem. before we go back to sort of the disputes you re currently in, you paid a very heavy price for being a trade unionist. yeah. a phrase that will mean a great deal to trade unionists listening and w
nostalgic for the control and the values that we had. people talk about the winter of discontent and the excesses of the trade union movement as it s styled and as it s caricatured by the press, which was extremely hostile. i m nostalgic for the balance that we were creating. i think society was becoming rebalanced in the 70s. thatcher not only crushed the trade unions, she brought in the big bang. she got rid of paternalism in companies. when you worked at a factory, notjust in bournville, in cadburys, but nestles as we used to call it in west london where i used to work, any of the brewers, any of the factories had football fields, social clubs. some of them had housing. my first house i bought was a railway house, provided by british rail and provided by the great western railway. all of that has gone. people now disregard the workforce as something that s under their shoe in some ways. not if you re an office worker, but if you re doing refuse
brian: a lot of the stuff doesn t kick in until the middle of june. rachel: wow. brian: middle of june. 800 stingers, 2,000 javelin. steve, you mentioned those drones. the problem with those they re kamikaze, they are great but you use them once. they goal quick. steve: only 5,000 bucks each so that s a deal. brian: let s get a lot more. just let them fight. because what s happening is and that s why you saw an irate putin yesterday i imagine because no one knows for sure. is he not making the progress he thought. he knows his money is running out. knows his people are having trouble getting money out of atms. oh, you thought we had bare snestles you have got to see in russia there is nothing anywhere. there is a huge problem there and they are being squeezed. and we re going to talk about this in 20 minutes or a little bit longer with jeb keen. there is a report out of china that they were ready to go take taiwan in the fall. and now they are rethinking it because of what is