diversity, equity and inclusion at a time when corporate america is trying to back out of billions of dollars in commitments. gay head did not put a crack in the glass ceiling. she is someone else s head to do it and took credit for it 50 times. about what i was really worried about is the shape of money disappearing. after george floyd, corporate america was shamed into committing zillions of dollars to diversity, equity and inclusion. that meant cash for patronage for his crew. but the corporate america is found out quickly the diversity, equity, and inclusion game, is that only a hand grenade and lawsuits but unproductive waste of time. an incredibly divisive to the corporate culture. america believes in diversity, but not at the expense of achievement and profitability. so whoever did the right thing: firing gay said novels to the country that mirrors trumps identity. we are learning diversity,
excitement in the holidays . covid struck. you can feel the - excitement in the holidays everybody comedy parents and students are very excited because i think the message has got through. a lot of people were nervous about getting their results but they have done pretty and g. brilliant zillions is some thing that has shone through this year group. the thing that has shone through this year group- thing that has shone through this ear urou -. ., ., year group. the government wanted urades to year group. the government wanted grades to return year group. the government wanted grades to return to year group. the government wanted grades to return to pre-pandemic. grades to return to pre pandemic levels and today they can say it is mission accomplished. this graph shows that in 2019, 60 7.1% of students in england were passing all of their gcse exams. you then see the line got from 2020 to 2022 but this year, it is roughly back to where it was. in wales and northern ireland, they ha
wouldn t have gotten a job five years ago. we re putting a lot of pressure on the labor market. they get people to work, which is a wonderful goal. taking marginal people and putting them to work. this is what a liberal would want to do in any case. get them working. get them proud of themselves. this should be helping. then we re hearing this despair, this lack of enthusiasm. i want to point something out, by the way. all this talk about biden s son, hunter, the last couple days, and they re going to keep talking about it. does anybody realize that jared and ivanka made $640 million during their time in the white house while they were wearing their white house badges around the world and bringing abrahamic accords, all the countries together? all the time, they were making zillions of dollars with the president s badge on them. now saying this new thing doesn t smell right? wait a minute, what happened to the four years before? what happened during all that time? i know, some people
we are, allowed to have these honest conversations. new york, 42 pages, how teachers can go out of their way not to inform parents if their kid wants to do gender transition surgery or feel a certain way so a manual for teachers in new york city. they spend zillions of dollars. and they have terrible results. let s focus on this. so teachers don t have to tell the parents. in public schools in new york. in the city? yes. unbelievable.
late 1970s, when she was upgraded to first class. jessica leeds testified, we were sitting there when all of a sudden trump decided to kiss me and groped me. there was no conversation. it was like out of the blue. he was trying to kiss me. he was trying to pull me towards him. it s like he had 40 zillions hands, and it was a tussling match between the two of us. and it was when he started putting his hand up my skirt that that kind of gave me a jolt of strength, and i managed to wiggle out of the seat, and i went storming back to my seat in the coach. jessica leeds first came forward with her story during the presidential campaign in 2016. today, jessica leeds testified, at that time in that place, in the work environment, men could basically get away with a lot. and that s sort of where i put it. joining us now is faith gay, a former prosecutor for the