, but simply because she is charming , stunning, cute, beautiful, smart, and today she will tell us something very, very interesting, meet, our guest is mia boyka, hello again everyone, not a single march 8 is complete without womens smiles, to which we are full today, and flowers, and flowers, flowers, thats right, and stas mikhailov, but stas mikhailov was taken away from us, rich divorced women, with flowers, i admit that it was a glitch. Finished them off, antosh , drum roll, please, yes, my dears, my beautiful ones, make us happy, please make us happy, all these flowers remind you of how beautiful you are, how much we need you, thank you, dear, very beautiful , thank you, girls, we have enough time to sit here, yes, so no, yes, and for this we need free hands, so i will ask your assistants, you have a very cool voice and i know that you and lesha dove filmed a video, and with lesha i filmed just a bunch, half of mine, thats what it is, i filmed with him, and because of this i reco
When is everyone at home . Lead me wind the forgotten road between thickets thorny in fogs, clouds, there i will conquer. Im a little, what to cry because the road to the stone is far, far away. And if you jump from a stone, turn into an eagle and sing a cold sip, from afar, a stream, these are my brain poems, i understand, i have other music over quiet ones, there is more on the far side happened. I am to be born. I will fly over the stone , and i will see the light, and i, and this last most important one, i will fly, i will fly over the stone freely. At eagles and blue grasses. I see from above. Recognize me beloved, recognize me in a soaring bird. Forever i will remain a bird, if you dont recognize me, but recognize me, beloved, recognizing a soaring bird. Forever left a bird, a necklace, you know well done, let go of the guitar. And stay good morning on the air program, when everyone is at home , which today, with her smile and her voice, with her talent and all her being , larisa
The missoula free speech fight. So in the fall of, 1909, this woman pictured here, Elizabeth Gurley flynn, made her way to missoula to organize laborers. She was very young, 19 years old, as old, as some of you guys are, maybe even a little bit younger than some of you are. But she and several people were there to organize laborers, and specifically lumber workers in the missoula area. But the outcome of her visit there was not just a battle over rights and working conditions, but ultimately a battle over free speech. The rights to free speech, the right to speak freely in public, to assemble in public without being harassed or arrested or jailed. So in this, were going to were going to get into the details of what actually happened in missoula. But i also want to start out a little more broadly talk about the context of this period and whats leading up to this battle, whats shaping it, and then in the aftermath, talk a little about what happened to some of these people that were invol
The missoula free speech fight. So in the fall of, 1909, this woman pictured here, Elizabeth Gurley flynn, made her way to missoula to organize laborers. She was very young, 19 years old, as old, as some of you guys are, maybe even a little bit younger than some of you are. But she and several people were there to organize laborers, and specifically lumber workers in the missoula area. But the outcome of her visit there was not just a battle over rights and working conditions, but ultimately a battle over free speech. The rights to free speech, the right to speak freely in public, to assemble in public without being harassed or arrested or jailed. So in this, were going to were going to get into the details of what actually happened in missoula. But i also want to start out a little more broadly talk about the context of this period and whats leading up to this battle, whats shaping it, and then in the aftermath, talk a little about what happened to some of these people that were invol
The missoula free speech fight. So in the fall of, 1909, this woman pictured here, Elizabeth Gurley flynn, made her way to missoula to organize laborers. She was very young, 19 years old, as old, as some of you guys are, maybe even a little bit younger than some of you are. But she and several people were there to organize laborers, and specifically lumber workers in the missoula area. But the outcome of her visit there was not just a battle over rights and working conditions, but ultimately a battle over free speech. The rights to free speech, the right to speak freely in public, to assemble in public without being harassed or arrested or jailed. So in this, were going to were going to get into the details of what actually happened in missoula. But i also want to start out a little more broadly talk about the context of this period and whats leading up to this battle, whats shaping it, and then in the aftermath, talk a little about what happened to some of these people that were invol