from as early as 1919 through the early 60s, faulkner wrote extensively about the post-civil war south. he was the first author to do so, at a time when most writers were writing about anything but. he always said that he wrote about a south torn between itself, torn between the old ways, the old traditional ways and modern. he said he was going to break the antebellum code. right. and he did. he did. but? he did. yet he had those hobbies and interests that were definitely of a gentry class and gentry nature. his portrait on his horse there s a great example. and his writing habit. that s a great example. you do get to a certain level of success and all of a sudden, this seems like a good idea. and it s never a good idea at that age. at any age. exactly. was he politically active at all? there was a lot going on. he was a middle of the road democrat.
become an snl skit at a time when the nra is claiming it has all of this great power. they were still able to bring members of the senate to heel, including some democrats. i m wondering as a tactic. if becoming a joke, becoming a punch line. becoming a right wing insane. giving them the benefit, punch line, i think it s hugely offensive and incredibly derogatory and the suggestions are fairly dramatic. right. and apocalyptic. why would you want to associate yourself with the precivil war south. you re going to fight the federal government. that s what the nra is for. how does that give you more power with let s say moderate democrats on capitol hill? why should they bother? it used to be that their power was in their bipartisan support. they could call on democrats as well as republicans. why would any moderate democrat want to be associated with them and get an a rating from them any more? john, you revealed that you went to an actual nra convention a while back. when the
you guys both talked about talking to tarentino and coming at this script and talking about your family members going wait. the thing i think a lot of black people in the theater will wince at is the n word. hearing it so much. you re supposed to. you re supposed to. the film is not we didn t want to romanticize slavery. part of what was attractive about the project is we really never dealt with the brutality of what slavery was. whatever you see in this film, as horrible as it may be to hear or horrible as it may be to see, it doesn t come close to how bad it really was. if you got in a time machine and went to the pre-civil war south, you would hear the n word a lot more than you would hear it in the movie. you could go to the south right now, get what you need right now if you want to get the n word told to your face. when you say the n word it s supposed to not feel good. that s right. when you see how they use it, that s the way it was back then. if quentin tar
people don t have the same amount of chronic pain and inflammation. they ve seen that in arthritis. this took mice and knocked that portion of the receptor out, indeed the mice had less pain. they further went and were able to block this pore with a drug, and the same thing, these mice had less pain. so this is hopeful in the development of new drugs that target just this section of the receptor, can we give people pain relief without side effects which would be great. jenna: i only have about 30 more seconds here. did you think this is on the path towards more designer drugs. absolutely. jenna: drugs really developed for someone s genetics. absolutely. that we can look and see, gee, you ve got this pattern we can give you this medication and it s going to work better for you. which would be amazing. it s hopefully the future of medicine. jenna: very interesting innovation there. so far only in mice, this is a very limited study but one we thought was worth talking about. dr. londo
jenna: well, a new tactic by the united states in the drug war south of our border, and it includes the classified, which is why it caught our attention. julie, you have more on this? reporter: yeah, that s right. smugglers have long advertised work as security guards, house cleaners and cashiers telling applicants they must drive company cars to the united states, but what they aren t telling those job seekers, the cars are loaded with drugs, so to counter, i.c.e. is taking out their own ads in tijuana newspapers, and it will warn readers they might be unwitting pawns. there have been 39 arrests at san diego s two border crossings tied to these ads. there has also been a spike in teenagers apparently strapping drugs to their bodies to walk across the border from tijuana into the san diego area. the war on drugs getting more tricky while you consider the