tried marijuana. rides that before cannabis they never even dreamed of taking because this would happen. one day in june of 2009 they had no choice. kara had an important doctor s appointment five hours away in galveston, texas. they decided to try the marijuana brownies their neighbor had made i just gave it to her and she ate it. it was about an hour where she was sitting, no longer rocking, no longer hand flapping, no longer hitting. she is sitting there and looking out the window and she is looking at me and smiling. it was like a miracle. i got to see it up close when i went on a drive with them after kara had a dose of cannabis. we would never be able to do
marijuana, and rides before cannabis they never even dreamed of taking because this would happen. we re going home. but one day in june of 2009, they had no choice. kara had an important doctor s appointment five hours away in galveston, texas. christie and mark decided to try the marijuana brownies their neighborhood had made. i just gave it to her and she ate it. it was about an hour where she was sitting no longer rocking and no longer hand slapping or hitting, and she s sitting there looking out the window and looking at me and smiling. it was like a miracle. i got to see it up close when i went on a drive with them after kara had a dose of cannabis. we would never be able to do this. this is an easier life for
marijuana to help their children. dr. sanjay gupta introduces us to some of these families in a special report weed 6: marijuana and autism. it was on a car ride like this when they first tried marijuana. rides that before cannabis they never even dreamed of taking because this would happen. [ screaming ] but one day in june of 2009, they had no choice. kara had an important doctor s appointment five hours away in galveston, texas. christy and mark decided to try the marijuana brownies that their neighbor had made. i just gave it to her and she ate it and it was about an hour where she was sitting, no longer rocking, no longer hand slapping, no longer hitting, and she s sitting there and looking out the window and she s looking
joe biden has, very, very close to what normally incumbent parties need in order to win reelection. there are other numbers in this marist poll also which show that people have historically positive view of things, even though those numbers look somewhat negative. did i set that up the right way? i think you did. essentially, look, normally the right direction/wrong track number is bad. the same with congress s job approval rating. the hate congress overall, you like your own congressman. take a look here. look at this. the approval of congress 31%. that s really crummy compared to a disapproval of 61%. it s significantly higher than any point during the trump administration. you have to again go all the way back to june of 2009 to see a congressional approval rating in the 30s. right now we re seeing yes, these historically poor metrics are still poor, but they re not as poor as they were before which is generally an indication people are much more optimistic about the way the cou
to make a decision about the law that we would never have made and that we strongly disagree with. as a matter of policy. but in every case the job of the justice department is to make the best judgment it can as to what the law requires. matt, i want to come to you as a communicator. do you think this justice department is telling its story in the way that attorney general garland did just there adequately? i i don t think it s a communications problem. i think some decisions frankly have been hard to defend. look. that s the right answer that he favor and absolutely right. the justice department is supposed to interpret the law and not always black and white. the hardest cases is where there s tension in the law and different pieces of law. 12 years ago in june of 2009