only that it also tells you something very responsible about many people that we don t think about in terms of low-income people in terms of what they want to spend their money on when they have availability to do it. i think one of the arguments, i mean, one of the ways in which big food has pushed back against some of the stuff going on in attempts to change the landscape, the policy landscape, the economic landscape for healthier food is this idea of consumer preference, right, that essentially this is telling people what they should and shouldn t eat, it s getting here is the anti-soda tax commercial that was run by americans against food taxes during the super bowl. feeding a family is difficult enough in today s economy. now, some politicians want the government telling me how i should do it. they want to put new taxes on a lot of groceries i buy like soft drinks, juice drink, sports drinks, even flavored waters, trying to control what we eat and drink with taxes. give me
york city gives its unanimous approval on a proposal to build a $100 million mosque two blocks from the world trade center site. some 9/11 families are speaking out saying that the terrorists who launched the attacks are muslim. one father says i realize it s not all of them but i don t want to have to go to a memorial where my son died on 9/11 and look at a mosque. vote by the full board will be held later this month. a new tax commercial in pennsylvania drawing a bit of criticism. not so nice is you owe pennsylvania $4,212 in back taxes. listen, tom, we can make this easy. pay on line by june 18th and we ll skip your penalty. i don t know. kind of scary, isn t it? it s a government attempt to scare delinquent citizens into paying back taxes. they re suffering $1 billion budget deficit and the tax delinquency further hurts them. they have until june 18th to pay what they owe without paying