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Chris Hayes, like most extreme leftists at MSNBC, has a long history of using hyperbolic rhetoric to panic people into going along with their radical agenda. (He also has a reputation of being wrong a lot on these topics.) On Monday night’s episode of
All In, Hayes did his best to live up to his network’s standards by fear-mongering over climate change, and the lack of climate infrastructure spending in the bipartisan infrastructure deal.
Hayes ranted about how hot it was in Portland and how that was evidence of climate change. (Can someone please buy Chris Hayes a calendar? It s almost July!) The unhinged MSNBC host cynically tried to use the Surfside collapse in Miami to promote his extreme climate agenda.
塞门娅再度冲击奥运资格失败 她仍想战尤金世锦赛_比赛
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参考人物 | 朱迪·博钦斯基——亲历 乒乓外交 的美国女孩_《参考消息》官方网站
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Brothers Armand, left, and Antonio Berry, students at Weber State University, are photographed on Aug. 20, 2020. | Courtesy Benjamin Zack
OGDEN, Utah (AP) Antonio and Armand Berry are bonded by more than having grown together in the womb.
The brothers, both students at Weber State University, are high achievers academically and involved as volunteers in the community, the Standard-Examiner reports. They are also both legally blind.
“My brother and I, we developed a bond over the trials and tribulations of our experiences,” Antonio Berry said. “We’ve come a lot closer than I would go so far as to say normal siblings would due to the struggles he and I have had to face.”
By Emily AndersonJanuary 16, 2021 GMT
In this image provided by Weber State University, twin brothers Armand, left, and Antonio Berry, students at Weber State University, pose Aug. 20, 2020, in Ogden, Utah. The twin brothers were left legally blind after being shaken as babies by their biological father. This year, the university gave the Wildcat Achievement Award to Armand Berry to recognize his dedication to online learning made more challenging by his disability. His brother Antonio nominated him for the honor. (Benjamin Zack/Weber State University via AP)
In this image provided by Weber State University, twin brothers Armand, left, and Antonio Berry, students at Weber State University, pose Aug. 20, 2020, in Ogden, Utah. The twin brothers were left legally blind after being shaken as babies by their biological father. This year, the university gave the Wildcat Achievement Award to Armand Berry to recognize his dedication to online learning made more challenging by his disabilit