it still collectivist and creep and weird to me, the nation doesn t have us all, i don t care about you talk about it in the religious or the secular sense, it s an individual thing. i know he said also capitalist and all the ways that he can spend my money better than i can , which isn t what that means , but you want to extend your power to my actual soul. i believe in the separation of state and sold. this ll you re at the super bowl, the soul of the fans, it doesn t make any sense. it s impossible. the value of an individual, it is collectivist and creepy and weird and it makes my skin crawling. your skin is crawling right before me. i want to play with my favorite clip from last night, typist, w do we have the tape where joe points out one of the biggest problems we are facing as a
so, why is anyone surprised that he group of typist or terrorists masquerading as a political party don t have a plan other than cut things. we can you can go through sesame street or electric company, and find more sophisticated analyses of which we should be doing it with the american budget buckle your seat belts, i hope you don t want to keep your talents, long because that s all they re gonna talk about, they are handing the 2024 election to democrats, and redistricting those in their, favor because you re not accomplishing things only the republic happy. you ve got a good one on that when, you people say mac aides play this one brilliantly, has total control now. we might not know officially what kevin mccarthy gave, him but in order to get kids to changes vote, from no ds, between the 14th and 15th, man he must have gotten something huge. he didn t have time to go sit down with kevin mccarthy. how do we know that mccain doesn t want to just protect something about himself? b
that the ukrainian president, volodymyr zelensky, is to pay an official visit to america. in germany, a 97 year old woman has been convicted of complicity in the murder of more than 10,500 people during the holocaust. irmgard furchner worked as a secretary at the stutthof camp in what is now poland. she was given a two year suspended jail sentence. caroline hawley reports. wheeled in to hear the verdict against her, the end of what could be one of the very last holocaust trials, irmgard furchner, herface blurred by order of the court, a blanket over her lap. almost eight decades ago, she was a typist, a secretary to the camp commandant. but the judge rejected her lawyer s argument that she didn t know about the killings and ruled she was complicit in the mass murder of more than 10,000 people. translation: it is easy to say she wasjust a secretary, - but a secretary had an important role in the bureaucracy of a concentration camp. in all, over the course
irmgard furchner, her face blurred by order of the court, a blanket over her lap. almost eight decades ago, she was a typist, a secretary to the camp commandant. but the judge rejected her lawyer s argument that she didn t know about the killings and ruled she was complicit in the mass murder of more than 10,000 people. translation: it is easy to say she wasjust a secretary, - but a secretary had an important role in the bureaucracy of a concentration camp. in all, over the course of the second world war, an estimated 65,000 prisoners died in the stuthoff camp in nazi occupied poland in horrific circumstances. they were killed in its gas chamber, hanged and shot or succumbed to starvation and disease. irmgard furchner, seen here as a young woman, was only 18 and 19 at the time, so, despite her age, was tried in a specialjuvenile court. manfred goldberg, who s now 92 years old, was held in stuthoff camp for several months as a young teenager. he told me he wouldn t want an elderly woman
during the holocaust. irmgard furchner worked as a secretary at the stutthof camp in what is now poland. she was given a two year suspended jail sentence. caroline hawley reports. wheeled in to hear the verdict against her in what could be one of the very last holocaust trials, irmgard furchner, her face blurred by order of the court, a blanket over her lap. almost eight decades ago, she was a typist, a secretary to the camp commandant. but the judge rejected her lawyer s argument that she didn t know about the killings and ruled she was complicit in the mass murder of more than 10,000 people. translation: it is easy to say she wasjust a secretary, - but a secretary had an important role in the bureaucracy of a concentration camp. in all, over the course of the second world war, an estimated 65,000 prisoners died in the stuthoff camp in nazi occupied poland in horrific circumstances. they were killed in its gas chamber,