Sure, but this was obviously planned from the get-go. Look again...He always has bottles ready behind his desk.
Sure, but this was obviously planned from the get-go. Look again...He always has bottles ready behind his desk.
Here are just two comments from this video - I'm sure there are many "kids" who enjoy good music. Obviously you didn't take that into consideration. DT_hah:why would anyone under 50 be attending a fleetwood mac concert?
and why would anyone of any age care one whit about what bill o'reilly thinks about anything?
I'm 14 years old, I'm from Holland and this is one of my favo bands!! This is a band of all times!! I LOVE them!!
I'm 5 years old and I listen to The Beatles and Pink Floyd!
i am not at all surprised that you are swayed by you tube comments of a 14 and 5 year old.Here are just two comments from this video - I'm sure there are many "kids" who enjoy good music. Obviously you didn't take that into consideration. DT_hah:
As for your second question - for that particular Bill O'Reilly video - looks like 38,598 views, 1.7K likes, and 75 dislikes.
:rofl:
So you are saying those kids are lying?i am not at all surprised that you are swayed by you tube comments of a 14 and 5 year old.
bless your heart.So you are saying those kids are lying?
That's your response?
Really?
here is another old man yelling at clouds video you may like bazza. and this one got over 700k views. i haven't checked, but i bet the comments have a lot of young folks thinking this is awesome.
Bush’s opinion on abortion is not new — she made headlines in 1992 for saying it was “personal” — but her “struggle” with abortion and how she arrived at her stance on it is recounted in detail in Susan Page’s biography The Matriarch, which was released earlier this week.
“In all our years of campaigning, abortion was the toughest issue for me,” Bush later wrote in her 1994 memoir.
So much wisdom......“Having decided that the first breath is when the soul enters the body, I believe in Federally funded abortion,” Mrs. Bush wrote. “Why should the rich be allowed to afford abortions and the poor not?”
According to Page, Mrs. Bush was not against some possible restrictions on abortion but felt it wasn’t “a Presidential issue.”
“Abortion is personal,” Mrs. Bush wrote, and should be between the mother, father and doctors.
She also wrote that she believed “education is the answer.” Specifically, “I believe that we must give people goals in life for them to work for—Teach them the price you must pay for being promiscuous.”
She'll need every good wish she can get. I'm not sure that city's governable...After two terms under Rahm Emanuel.....former federal prosecutor Lori Lightfoot was elected Chicago mayor on Tuesday, becoming the first black woman and first openly gay person to lead the nation’s third-largest city.
And backing up a bit this, when she ended up in a runoff:
She certainly will have her hands full when she takes office on May1. Good luck Mayor...we are all truly pulling for you to get those rats under control!
On April 19, 1995, the city at the heart of the Sooner state was forever changed when a massive explosion tore through the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. A third of the structure nearly immediately collapsed, leaving 168 people dead and a city in a state of shock and grief.
On this 24th anniversary of the terror attack, the city will gather to remember not only those who were lost, but the people who unconditionally rushed in to help as well.
The 24th Anniversary Remembrance Ceremony at the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum will feature readings from Senator James Lankford, Governor Kevin Stitt, and OKC Mayor David Holt. Danny Gokey will also sing the National Anthem.
Survivors and family members will read the names of all 168 people killed in the terror attack. A rose will also be placed on each chair marking the victims.
At 9:02 a.m., the city will observe 168 seconds of silence.
https://twitter.com/abc/status/https://twitter.com/OU_Athletics/status/1119239477048819713/photo/1My wife and I visited the Oklahoma City Memorial several years ago. If memory serves, it was before 9/11. It’s a very sobering experience. There is a chair for each person killed. There are half sized chairs for the children. I struggled to hold it together.
I would have been a mess - I get very emotional during memorials. Thanks for sharing with us, Go Bama.My wife and I visited the Oklahoma City Memorial several years ago. If memory serves, it was before 9/11. It’s a very sobering experience. There is a chair for each person killed. There are half sized chairs for the children. I struggled to hold it together.
I'm probably in the extreme minority, but their best years were the Peter Green version, and the Bob Welch version.why would anyone under 50 be attending a fleetwood mac concert?
and why would anyone of any age care one whit about what bill o'reilly thinks about anything?
Nearly a year and a half after season two of FX's Emmy-winning American Crime Story ended, the future of the Ryan Murphy-produced anthology is coming back into focus.
On Tuesday, FX used its time at the Television Critics Association's summer press tour to announce that season three will focus on the saga of the Clinton presidency scandal with Monica Lewinsky on board to produce.
Production is set to begin in February, and the series is scheduled to premiere Sunday, Sept. 27, 2020, at 10 p.m. ET on FX.
The 39th president survived a dire cancer diagnosis in 2015 and surpassed George H.W. Bush as the longest-lived U.S. president in history this spring. He’s had some trouble walking after a hip replacement in May, but still teaches Sunday School in Plains, and with his wife of 73 years, Rosalynn, now 92, still plans an upcoming trip to help build houses with Habitat for Humanity in Nashville, Tennessee.
In his latest appearances at the Carter Center and in a town hall at Emory University, Carter blasted money in politics, urged action to combat the climate crisis, and celebrated the Carter Center’s work on public health, election monitoring and conflict resolution. But he said the center can do more to constructively criticize U.S. military engagements. The Carter Center has “never voiced an opinion publicly” on individual wars, he said with some regret, adding: “This is primarily my fault.”
“The United States is very deeply inclined to go to war,” Carter said, partly to “implant American policies” in other countries, and partly to “make a hero” out of wartime commanders in chief. This has significant economic consequences, he said: China has “been at peace” since he normalized relations with Beijing in 1979, and while the U.S. has spent trillions on military conflict, China has invested similar amounts in high-speed rail, new college campuses and other infrastructure.
Carter talks with the realism of a nonagenarian, born in 1924 when the world population was quarter of what it is today and life expectancy for American males was 58 years. Saying he plans to start spending more time with his extended family, he told the Carter Center audience that “this may be our last conversation with you ... we may or may not have one next year.”