never married, no kids. it s a beauty pageant, no one is holding a gun to your head to enter this thing, why can t they set their own rules about what they are looking for? that s a great question. this is going to come down to whether or not they were actually employees under french labor law. we have to think about it through that lens, not u.s. also take into consideration all the things they were doing, how they were representing the pageant organization, all the work they were doing and just look at those things come i think they re going to have a strong argument because we are looking at this through french labor law, not u.s. shannon: exhibit b, this is the head of the feminist group who was suing, this is translated, not by me the competition rules are discriminatory, marital status, age, attitude, choices of women, everything is subject to injunctions, candidates must be single and respect the rules of elegance, stop these sexist
and didn t exactly paint herself in a great light, either, is interesting here. monica lewinsky never married, no kids. harris: not for lack of trying. you hear the name monica. the trump documentaries like the one turning james comey to a sympathetic figure came out while he was in office. this clinton documentary comes up 22 years later so boy, it took a long time before we saw what obviously was one of the biggest news stories we ve seen in modern politics in 1998 and 1999. harris: we ve watched it for a while. when people go down the road it s a gender thing, no, it is more. it can be that but it is more about a bias thing. because for years mainstream media, i never have called it this. they called it the monica lewinsky affair. it s the bill clinton affair.
again boredom to near terror in no seconds. no we interacted with locals, the no kids, villagers. the problem is fighting insurgency. no you can t always tell the good guys from the bad guys. no i think that was the most stressful part of being over there. you can t tell who is good, who no is bad. you were wounded while there. yes, sir. no yes, sir. w i think we have video. yes. of that. no yes. amazing. you had a helmet cam. yes, sir.ma this is you in afghanistan in a fire fight. here we go. no no no no no
off i guess to the hamptons. ashley: my 84-year-old grandmother texted me says she watches gunsmoke. mid segment checking texts. somebody is watching it over chris cuomo. i heard a lot of people born before 1950. insp, how dare you not know what that is? say hi to grandma for me. we ll do jell-o shots later. ashley: she is not the jell-o shots. watching insp. pete: may have had a jell-o shot last night. adult party last night, no kids. resulted in something i just don t have tolerance anymore. pete: delivered this morning. joe concha, showed up. got to go i m told. thank you. pete: turn it over to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for the fox weather forecast. rick, when is the last time you took a jell-o shot? rick: don t make me answer that.
Child advocates decry idea of housing migrant children at former CT detention facility as step backward
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The former Connecticut Juvenile Training School, at 1225 River Road in Middletown, was shut down in 2018. The facility is shown April 8.Cassandra Day / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less
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Gov. Ned Lamont speaks at a COVID-19 community vaccination clinic March 14 in Stamford. Health workers administered the first dose of the Moderna vaccine to more than 350 people from the immigrant and undocumented communities.John Moore / Getty ImagesShow MoreShow Less
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Several advocacy groups across the state are criticizing the Lamont administration’s perceived interest in the state’s former juvenile detention center as a location for housing unaccompanied migrant youth, with one saying it would be a “warehousing of children in cages.”