in 2003, we were in poland. we came across a small shop that was bottling out in front of you. reluctant said write them we are onto something. a major one i have taken many risks over the years. with gun paycheck to paycheck s and suffered through some hard years. i know that the oiler he can become a huge nationwide business but i ve taken it as far as i can by myself. investment in a partnership with any of the sharks means we can have storage in every major city of america and become the national brand. hi, my name is q kurt campbell, and i am from beautiful egg harbor wisconsin. i am here today asking for $500,000 in exchange for 35% of my company. kevin, you have mentioned that you collect all of oil, so you know the nuances of fresh oil, but many americans, a lot of americans have ever tasted fresh olive oil. before we came along the only way to buy olive oil was to start a bunch of labels and hope. you have no idea if it s going to taste fresh. our system is full
now. good morning, i am lindsey reiser. we are going to begin with breaking news from the u.s. supreme court. two huge decisions on the final day of its term. moments ago the justices striking down president biden s plan to forgive more than $400 billion in student loan debt. the high court says it needed to be approved by congress and they also ruled that colorado website designer can refuse to create a website for a samecouples saying that the first amendment allows her to refuse to invoice it endorsed messages. colorado seeks to force an individual that. with us now to start off our coverage this hour, nbc news correspondent outside of the court. catherine christian. now an msnbc legal analyst. first, to you here. two huge cases. what did the supreme court have to stay on both of those? well, on that case regarding lgbtq rights. that was the case where now, the opinion, they said that the web design was within her rights and that colorado, which regarded this as an an
our top story this hour, the two major new rulings by the u.s. supreme court and what they mean for the nation. our justice correspondent jessica snider, she s here with mere in the situation room. jessica, walk us through these very, very significant decisions. yeah, two major decisions on the last day of the court s term, wolf, from what has become a very divided supreme court. so the conservative majority striking down the president s student loan debt forgiveness program while also issuing a ruling in favor of a website designer that leaves the door open for businesses across the country to discriminate. the supreme court ending the term with a dramatic finish and showing just how ideologically divided the justices are. first, all six conservative justices ruling in favor of a christian web designer from colorado who refused to create wedding websites from same-sex couples citing religious grounds. she objected to a colorado law that prohibits discrimination saying it v
january 6th select committee officially issuing a subpoena to donald trump. when exactly they want to sit down with the former president, and what s next and what could be a potentially long and historic legal battle. plus, president biden set to speak any minute now. the focus, the student debt relief program. with election day less than three weeks away, how it s moving forward, after surviving two legal challenges. and while we re talking midterms, senator raphael warnock, no more mr. nice guy ramping up attack ads against his opponent herschel walker. plus in nevada, we re talking to both candidates in the senate race that could decide which party controls the chamber next year. we re going to start with nbc news capitol hill correspondent ali vitali, new york times reporter, and msnbc contributor katie benner and legal analyst charles coleman. good afternoon to all of you. ali, obviously this is breaking in the last hour. you were busy reading everything in betwe
holiday for encouraging majority of days be spent at their desk. this will have noticeable impact. security company castle systems says we have been sitting around 43% occupancy passed couple of months. some like new york city seeing lower occupancy rates. more are returning to the office, castle says increased interest in their tracking system. not just for security reasons. people are coming in when they are supposed to be when they say they are coming in. companies have seen push back from employees that don t want to end remote work. many are calling return to office draconian and they do exceptional work. castle says occupancy levels 20% earlier this work. they have doubled and expect them to go up more tomorrow. charles? changes, a lot, madison. let s bring in casey mcdonald and heatha. mike, i think the window is closing in on folks. 20% across the board. might and muscle, i am going to work from home or else i think that clock is ticking down. maybe to an ex