on one side, dismay on the other. we have a parliamentary democracy. today, the supreme court upheld that verdict, but it wasn t really clear who d won or lost. this judgment does not change the fact that the uk will leave the european union, and it s ourjob to deliver on the instruction the people of the uk have given us. never has so much attention been given to a supreme court case of such enormous constitutional significance, but which may end up having no substantive effect. we ll hear from alex salmond, on the path scotland will now take. and labour s emily thornberry on the party s challenge of trying to appeal to both sides of the brexit debate. also tonight, should primary school children wear hijabs? we must not normalise it, instead of supporting that practice we should question it because what you are doing is sexualising that child. donald trump invites the cameras into the oval office. what s he got to say about the environment? we can t be in an environmental p
people would vote for it. they have lost the common touch. and this. president obama said america would accept 1200 refugees. no, prepare to go to war. is satire now the effective opposition to president trump? we ll ask erstwhile american ruby wax. hello. have the baby boomers robbed the millennials of their future? probably not, but research out this morning did suggest something extraordinary is happening in terms of intergenerational incomes. the resolution foundation says that typical pensioner incomes after housing costs are now higher than those of people of working age. i can t overstate how unusual that is in the old days we tended to think the aged were poor. but a lot has happened in the last few decades. for one, the old have carried on working. a fifth of pensioner households have a wage earner in them. and of course they are enjoying the fruits of the heyday of the old final salary pension schemes add the way the housing market has worked in their favour
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Pope Francis meets with Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I at the Vatican, Oct. 4, 2021. / Credit: Vatican MediaWashington, D.C. Newsroom, May 17, 2024 / 18:04 pm (CNA).Pope Francis might be traveling to Turkey next year for the 1,700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicea, according to Eastern Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople Bartholomew in comments he made on Thursday.Although the Holy See has not confirmed any travel plans, the ecumenical patriarch told a group of reporters that a committee is being established to organize a visit, according to the Orthodox Times. The referenced council took place in the ancient city of Nicea in 325 A.D. in the former Roman Empire, which is now the present-day city of Iznik in Turkey. "His Holiness Pope Francis wishes for us to jointly celebrate this important anniversary," Bartholomew said.The Council of Nicea was the first ecumenical council in the Church. It is accepted by the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church,