i m proud to have done it. they wanted to get it back, right? there be no question. we celebrate. that yeah? we didn t. we did something that was a miracle. when i walked onto the stage today, a gentleman in the back, probably works for fox, nice guy, said, sir, that like to thank. you i said, for what? he said, you save 2 million lives in the last three years. you ve saved 2 million lives. i said, thank you very much. i know exactly what you meant. 2 million lives. no one has done more in that regard than me. that is perhaps the most important emission from donald trump last night. again, breaking, about being the one to eliminate a constitutional right for women s health care that has stood for over 50 years. here is donald trump s problem. he goes into, i would call it softball a softball event. i ve never seen one a fawning. i m not sure why they had to host their? you know, they could ve just had one to sit there and smile and say, you are great. ask them the s
woman s health care. how important do you think that should be in a factor for all americans who are voting in the next election? it feels like we ve slip back. i can t believe my daughters this is what we have to keep fighting. and what joe wants to do is to codify roe. and that s what we have to do. we have to keep fighting. are you ever hopeless? do you ever lose hope? no. i m never hopeless. so what do you say to people who are really scared right now? i would say that things are going to get better. we have to continue the fight, and that s what we plan to do. now, i think this is really interesting, but i understand classes resume for you. this morning, yes, i had to go to school for a teachers meeting. so you still work at nova. paid job.
CLRG is set to consider four motions at its Extraordinary Meeting in Belfast on Saturday, prompted by the cheating allegations that have rocked the Irish dance organization.
i m not going to be english. it s really interesting that my dad identifies very specifically as british indian. because that s not how i feel, but i totally understand. he s of the generation that really had to fight for survival. do you think it s easier for me to be or feel english because i do look white? it s easier for you to pass off as english english than it would be for me because, like you said, there is a difference between us. it never ceases to shock me or still surprise me how moving it is talking to my dad and hearing about my grandad s experiences, and when my grandparents were alive, talking to them about their experiences. you know, i wasn t there, and when i hear them talk about it, i still feel it. you know grandad had a situation where he was at a teachers meeting and one of the governors turned round and said, well,