jamie raskin: umm, you know tommy left us a note, and the note said, please forgive me. my illness won today. look after each other, the animals, and the global poor for me, all my love, tommy. umm, so, he didn t have anything in there about take some time off. (laughs) and, uh. crowd: usa! usa! usa! usa! jamie raskin: why is america such an extraordinary country? we are not unified by virtue of being one ethnicity, or one ideology, or one religion. we re unified by one constitution and one rule of law, and then the values under our constitution. it is an aspiration. it s a challenge to us. the constitution shouldn t be some kind of fetish document. it should be the living commitment that we all have to make democracy work in service of the common good. that is the constitution that comes out of the civil war and reconstruction. that is the constitution that we ve been fighting for since then. and we ve got to keep fighting for it. crowd: trump! trump! trump! trump! trum
family. tried to protect her anyway we could. family-turned army, when she vanished. this is how many people we have right now. we just started searching. they just wanted to find her. that kind of emotion really drives you. where was she? was someone following her connected someone attacked her? after scrutiny, the ex- boyfriend, and three others she encountered that night. scared. how many times did they talk to you? 30, plus. tantalizing clues, a handprint. there was blood on their hand you could almost see this happening in real-time. ■ç could she solve her own mystery? she s fighting him off. it was so emotional. i wanted to jump out of my seat. never in 1 million years would you expect something like that. on long island, about 10 miles down the shoreline from the mansions and fancy cars, and the elites of the hamptons is a blue-collar beach town some call the poor man s paradise, but life was rich for these brothers and sister
two tantalizing clues, a handprint. the subject had blood on their hand. and a trail on twitter. incredibly powerful. you can almost see this happening in realtime. could she help solve her own mystery? she s fighting him off. it was so emotional. i wanted to jump out of my seat. never in a million years would you expect something like that. on long island, about 10 miles down the shoreline from the mansions, the fancy cars and the elites of the hamptons, is a blue collar beach town some call the poor man s paradise. but life was rich for these brothers and sisters in mastic, new york, filled with the love of a large tight-knit family. all that was taken away one warm evening when evil rolled in with the summer tide. their youngest sister was missing. we just want you to come home safely. reporter: and for better or worse, this family would go to extraordinary lengths to find her. we re going to scour those woods right now. we were our own investigators.
I mean womens sports just arent covered. What will make Caitlin Clark and the phenomenon so important in what will make this moment a Pivot Point is that they were breaking through that Glass Booth if you could say and that Glass Booth where women and people who watch womens sports have been saying well over for a generation that hey, we have a product here to get coverage for it. Study after study shows that they were not getting the same kind of shine as mens sports. But to go as you said whether this will actually change things in terms of strategy and the structure to make sure these women are paid what they are worth. We will have to wait that tabitha talked about. What we know about the history of womens sports is that people dont get paid their fair share without struggle. That means strikes, that means