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This action under the heat of the battle because of an imminent threat. they got the wrong guy. so if they got the wrong guy and their intelligence was so great, an attack should have happened. as you said, thank god it did it nod. what also shows is that there s a huge exaggeration in to the abandoning of the normal protocols. what general mckenzie admitted, they didn t know who was in the car. they didn t know who lived in the house. they didn t know who was there. they took the shot anyway and there s an expectation especially on the part of congress that there s protocols in place that if any over the horizon effort is taken against terrorists, to disrupt activities, that we re shooting terrorists. martha: we ll play this later. congressman michael waltz was compelling on this as well. he said if i m orders that strike, i would love to have civilian eyes on the ground that can look into the car from some distance and say don t take this shot. we don t have that anymore. that was ....
Everywhere. people are smoking in private clubs. and public festivals. but none of this is for matt. he is a military man and marijuana would be a career-ender. i grew up in wisconsin, a well-loving family. i was educated that that s a drug. you don t do that. and i never did. but decades ago, marijuana was a medication prescribed by doctors and dispense bid pharmacies. this is harry j. but that all changed in 1930. henry anslinger, for him public enemy number one. you guessed it. marijuana. this guy, saw how he could increase the budget of his department by having this mission going after marijuana. saying there s this drug that the mexican migrant works are smoking and it is loco weed and it is crazy and it will make them rape your women. he got the message out through news reports. and then came this curing the insane. refer madness, portraying it as unproductive, crazed. people are still afraid of what pot can do to them. in many ways, defining our attit ....
he got the message out through news reports. and then came this curing the insane. refer madness, portraying it as unproductive, crazed. people are still afraid of what pot can do to them. in many ways, defining our attitudes for 70 years. yeah. marijuana became illegal in 1937. by 1970, it was a schedule one controlled substances. the government wag was saying, it nod medicinal value and had high potential for abuse. all the reason the figis stayed away from marijuana, until this. and this may be hard for you to watch. ....
Through news reports. and then came this curing the insane. refer madness, portraying it as unproductive, crazed. people are still afraid of what pot can do to them. in many ways, defining our attitudes for 70 years. yeah. marijuana became illegal in 1937. by 1970, it was a schedule one controlled substances. the government wag was saying, it nod medicinal value and had high potential for abuse. all the reason the figis stayed away from marijuana, until this. and this may be hard for you to watch. okay, baby. this is their daughter, charlotte. ....
this guy, saw how he could increase the budget of his department by having this mission going after marijuana. saying there s this drug that the mexican migrant works are smoking and it is loco weed and it is crazy and it will make them rape your women. he got the message out through news reports. and then came this curing the insane. refer madness, portraying it as unproductive, crazed. people are still afraid of what pot can do to them. in many ways, defining our attitudes for 70 years. yeah. marijuana became illegal in 1937. by 1970, it was a schedule one controlled substances. the government wag was saying, it nod medicinal value and had high potential for abuse. all the reason the figis stayed ....