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Jul 15, 2017
07/17
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based headily & bennet has revolutionized the way we look at fashion in the food space.twr we take making aprons very seriously. >> ellen bennet, fondly known as the apron lady is the burst of inspiration behind the this movement. since 2012, her vibrant handcrafted designs have become a c you ult favorite. ellen was working as a line cook earning just $10 an hour at providence when she cooked up the idea for hedley & bennet. the standard, a white apron, lacked quality, durability and style. >> it was not comfortable. it didn't fit. i really wanted to make a better uniform and make something that people felt proud to wear in the kitchen. >> the art of the eye end abe ron became ellen's daily focus. >> i had fabrics. i had chunks and i had dreams and i had ideas. i'd have to be like, no, let me just tell you. we're talking about proper bad -- aprons. they're made out of dem, made in los angeles. when i put it on their body, tie it on, and then they would love it. >> the steep price tag wasn't a hard sell, either. you look at the craftsmanship and this thing is going to la
based headily & bennet has revolutionized the way we look at fashion in the food space.twr we take making aprons very seriously. >> ellen bennet, fondly known as the apron lady is the burst of inspiration behind the this movement. since 2012, her vibrant handcrafted designs have become a c you ult favorite. ellen was working as a line cook earning just $10 an hour at providence when she cooked up the idea for hedley & bennet. the standard, a white apron, lacked quality, durability...
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Jul 4, 2017
07/17
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CNNW
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also here in the studio with us bruce bennet.k you to you as well. >>> when we come back the heart wrenching case of a terminally ill baby, grabs the attention of some of the world most powerful. we'll discuss wen we come back. announcer: your daughter just had her first breakup. do you... [both sobbing] don't worry, sweetie. this is gonna happen a lot. announcer: or... "nice, single boys." heh heh. that was weird. announcer: as a parent, there are no perfect answers, but you don't have to be perfect to a perfect parent. thousands of teens in foster care will love you just the same. >>> welcome back everyone. any day now doctors in the uk plan to take a terminally i'll infan after life support after winning a legal battle to do so. his parents wanted to take him for the u.s. for spermtal treatment. two of the most powerful people on the planet are weighing in on this life and death battle. cnn reports. >> reporter: the tubes that keep him alive will be turned off soon. his parents lost hope to take him to the states for highly ex
also here in the studio with us bruce bennet.k you to you as well. >>> when we come back the heart wrenching case of a terminally ill baby, grabs the attention of some of the world most powerful. we'll discuss wen we come back. announcer: your daughter just had her first breakup. do you... [both sobbing] don't worry, sweetie. this is gonna happen a lot. announcer: or... "nice, single boys." heh heh. that was weird. announcer: as a parent, there are no perfect answers, but you...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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chair is over at the concorde museum and wonderful collaboration last year, the reservation and north bennet street school came together to reproduce the emerson chair that visitors could sit in the chair where emerson looked at -- emerson wrote nature and looked at themselves over the landscape. one thing people always notice if they have seen the original and they look at this one that is reproduced, this one is green and the original chair is black. in fact the green chair, when -- green chair is what it would have been when emerson first sat in it at mary windsor's writing desk, in this period, but later victorians loved to keep things black so the chair has changed . so what people notice is when they stood in it, it envelopes you. you feel very held when you are writing there. comewonderful wood piece of this writing surface is actually a natural color. piece of furniture adaptive use. it started out as a green chair. ezra ripley, the tall gentleman, he wanted the writing surface a little higher. so he made this homemade mockup to create a writing surface. this is an important place fo
chair is over at the concorde museum and wonderful collaboration last year, the reservation and north bennet street school came together to reproduce the emerson chair that visitors could sit in the chair where emerson looked at -- emerson wrote nature and looked at themselves over the landscape. one thing people always notice if they have seen the original and they look at this one that is reproduced, this one is green and the original chair is black. in fact the green chair, when -- green...
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Jul 15, 2017
07/17
by
CSPAN2
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emerson chairs at the concorde museum and wonderful collaboration last year, the reservation and north bennet street school came together to reproduce the emerson chair that visitors could sit in the chair where emerson looked at themselves over the landscape. one thing people always notice if they have seen the original and they look at this one that is reprinted, this one is green and the original chair is black. in fact the green chair, when emerson first sat in it at mary windsor's writing desk, in this period, but later victorians loved to keep things black so the chair has changed so what people notice is when they stood in it, it envelopes you. the other addition, this wonderful wood piece, this writing surface, is a natural color. this is adaptive use in the green chair. ezra ripley, the tall gentleman, the generating surface a little higher, a markup of ways to create -- an important place for visitors to come and look over the landscape, where the american revolution started for the second revolution, literature and american writing, that happened over the same hue when he wrote nat
emerson chairs at the concorde museum and wonderful collaboration last year, the reservation and north bennet street school came together to reproduce the emerson chair that visitors could sit in the chair where emerson looked at themselves over the landscape. one thing people always notice if they have seen the original and they look at this one that is reprinted, this one is green and the original chair is black. in fact the green chair, when emerson first sat in it at mary windsor's writing...
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Jul 16, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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the wonderful collaboration with them last year, the concord museum, the trustees and the north of bennet street school came together to reproduce the emerson chair that visitors would actually sit in the chair where emerson wrote "nature" and looked out for themselves over the landscaper the one thing that people always notice is facing the original and a look at this one that we have reproduced. this one is great and original chair over at concord museum is black. in fact, the green chair is what would've been whe went emerson t set in it and many writing desk at were green. the chair has changed a little bit. what people notice is that when you sit in it that sort of envelops you and you feel very held while your writing. the other addition, this wonderful wood piece, this writing surface is actually a natural color. this is really a furniture piece of adapted juice. started out as a green chair, possibly as a ripley who was a tall gentleman when he sat and if he wanted the writings are a little higher so they did this homemade markup like we would do today of creating a higher writing
the wonderful collaboration with them last year, the concord museum, the trustees and the north of bennet street school came together to reproduce the emerson chair that visitors would actually sit in the chair where emerson wrote "nature" and looked out for themselves over the landscaper the one thing that people always notice is facing the original and a look at this one that we have reproduced. this one is great and original chair over at concord museum is black. in fact, the green...
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Jul 17, 2017
07/17
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BBCNEWS
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take this same scene between lizzy bennet and lady catherine de burgh in three different productions.een able to account for the honour of seeing you here. and if i am that choice, why may i not accept him? you have insulted me by every possible method. i must beg to return to the house. it was here at chawton in hampshire, jane austen completed her works, cramming them with 19th century manners, morals and messages of social comment. the following conversation which took place between the two friends... the former model lily cole is one of the voices of audible's new version of northanger abbey. she says austen is still influential. i think there are still bigger messages which are relevant today around social critiques, class structures, love and romance and how those two things can interrelate sometimes. jane austen was buried here at winchester cathedral, having completed around only half a dozen or so works. but 200 years on, such is her continued literary pulling power, she will feature on the new £10 note to be unveiled here next week. ironically, jane austen made little money
take this same scene between lizzy bennet and lady catherine de burgh in three different productions.een able to account for the honour of seeing you here. and if i am that choice, why may i not accept him? you have insulted me by every possible method. i must beg to return to the house. it was here at chawton in hampshire, jane austen completed her works, cramming them with 19th century manners, morals and messages of social comment. the following conversation which took place between the two...
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Jul 27, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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bennet: thank you, mr. president. i would like to thank my colleagues from new mexico, my neighbors, for being here. i also want to thank the presiding officer for your statement. as usual, you are pointing the senate in a direction that we should be headed. whether people in my state support the affordable care act or whether they don't, they are dissatisfied with the way our health care system works, and the affordable care act or obamacare or whatever you want to call it, that's just part of our health care system. we have medicare, we have medicaid, we have hospitals, we have doctors, we have nurses, and it all adds up in america in the 21st century to a system that is really hard on people. and makes it very hard for them to predict their future, and it creates situations where they have to make choices that no other people in the industrialized world have to make, about raising their family, about staying in a job as the presiding officer was talking about, that they might not want to stay in for fear they would
bennet: thank you, mr. president. i would like to thank my colleagues from new mexico, my neighbors, for being here. i also want to thank the presiding officer for your statement. as usual, you are pointing the senate in a direction that we should be headed. whether people in my state support the affordable care act or whether they don't, they are dissatisfied with the way our health care system works, and the affordable care act or obamacare or whatever you want to call it, that's just part of...
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Jul 17, 2017
07/17
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BBCNEWS
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take this same scene between lizzy bennet and lady catherine de burgh in three different productions.count for the honour of seeing you here. and if i am that choice, why may i not accept him? you have insulted me by every possible method. i must beg to return to the house. it was here at chawton in hampshire, jane austen completed her works, cramming them with 19th century manners, morals and messages of social comment. the following conversation which took place between the two friends... the former model lily cole is one of the voices of audible's new version of northanger abbey. she says austen is still influential. i think there are still bigger messages which are relevant today around social critiques, class structures, love and romance and how those two things can interrelate sometimes. jane austen was buried here at winchester cathedral, having completed around only half a dozen or so works. but 200 years on, such is her continued literary pulling power, she will feature on the new £10 note to be unveiled here next week. ironically, jane austen made little money herself, but h
take this same scene between lizzy bennet and lady catherine de burgh in three different productions.count for the honour of seeing you here. and if i am that choice, why may i not accept him? you have insulted me by every possible method. i must beg to return to the house. it was here at chawton in hampshire, jane austen completed her works, cramming them with 19th century manners, morals and messages of social comment. the following conversation which took place between the two friends... the...
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Jul 1, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN3
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bennet. now mr. elvins. >> good morning. i greatly appreciate the opportunity to appear before you today to discuss the responsibility of the office and enforcement and removal operations with the u.s. -- and enforcing and combatting gang activity. the 6,000 dedicate t officers enforce immigration laws in a fair and effective manner by identifying, arresting and detaining and removing ail yans who are illegally present in the united states or otherwise vile our immigration laws. the enforcement of these laws is critical to the safety of our country. despite the complexity and immense db of this mig, the men of ero commit their duties professionally and i'm pleased to have the pleasure of representing them here today. ero lays a critical role in the removal of gangs in the community illegally. as a enforcement dealing with title eight we are able to target other gang members. enabling these public safety threats to be removed from the communities they are victim mizing and return to their home countries. ero is an invaluable
bennet. now mr. elvins. >> good morning. i greatly appreciate the opportunity to appear before you today to discuss the responsibility of the office and enforcement and removal operations with the u.s. -- and enforcing and combatting gang activity. the 6,000 dedicate t officers enforce immigration laws in a fair and effective manner by identifying, arresting and detaining and removing ail yans who are illegally present in the united states or otherwise vile our immigration laws. the...
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Jul 21, 2017
07/17
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. >> reporter: that lawyer bob bennet represented the castille family and won a large settlement in that case. there is an active investigation near an outside agency. the police chief did speak and said noor was well trained and a good hire, but in this case, she will not defend him. >> what the police chief said, as the outside agency is investigating, i find remarkable as this plays out. of course, we'll wait to see what comes of that investigation. thanks so much, scott, i appreciate it. >>> we return to breaking news this hour. cnn exclusive special council, bob mueller, making a request of white house staff to preverve all documents, text messages, e-mails, any notes taken related to donald trump jr.'s now infamous meeting with a russian attorney at trump tower at the height of the election and the response after the fact. what does it mean for the investigation and the white house? that's next. hey you've gotta see this. c'mon. no. alright, see you down there. mmm, fine. okay, what do we got? okay, watch this. do the thing we talked about. what do we say? it's going to be great. w
. >> reporter: that lawyer bob bennet represented the castille family and won a large settlement in that case. there is an active investigation near an outside agency. the police chief did speak and said noor was well trained and a good hire, but in this case, she will not defend him. >> what the police chief said, as the outside agency is investigating, i find remarkable as this plays out. of course, we'll wait to see what comes of that investigation. thanks so much, scott, i...
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Jul 26, 2017
07/17
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durbin, kaine, baldwin, murphy, harris, cardin, hirono, reed, nelson, klobuchar, shaheen, coons, bennet, king, menendez, whitehouse, leahy, and booker. i want to thank them for joining me in this effort. mr. president, i would yield the floor and note the absence of a quorum. the presiding officer: the clerk will call the roll. the senator from south carolina. a senator: i ask consent to terminate the quorum call and do colloquy with my friend from louisiana. the presiding officer: without objection. a senator: mr. president? the presiding officer: the senator from louisiana. mr. cassidy: mr. president, we are struggling right now to find a replacement for the affordable care act. the american people have voted in four successive elections for such a replacement culminating the election of donald trump to be president of the united states. now, you can ask yourself if the affordable care act is so great, why would the american people continue to want to have a different program. and i think the wisdom of the american people is that -- they do not want the federal government so intrusive
durbin, kaine, baldwin, murphy, harris, cardin, hirono, reed, nelson, klobuchar, shaheen, coons, bennet, king, menendez, whitehouse, leahy, and booker. i want to thank them for joining me in this effort. mr. president, i would yield the floor and note the absence of a quorum. the presiding officer: the clerk will call the roll. the senator from south carolina. a senator: i ask consent to terminate the quorum call and do colloquy with my friend from louisiana. the presiding officer: without...
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Jul 14, 2017
07/17
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KQED
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collins, who delivers the worst proposal ever to lizzy bennet in "pride and prejudice..." >> i am wellware that 1,000 pounds is all you may ever be entitled to, but rest assured i shall never reproach on that score when we are married! >> ...you're not that wealthy, you're not that pretty, you have an offer on the table today, from me. you'd better take it. >> reporter: it's the great economic risk faced by all jane austen's bennett girls. but, says desai: >> lizzy turns down mr. collins, and the advice of her mother, because she wants to roll the dice again. of course, that ends up very nicely, ultimately, with mr. darcy, but at the time, she didn't know. >> reporter: no, lizzy was lucky, in love and money. she accepted the risk. but most others did not. >> the next day, he gives the same proposal to charlotte, her friend, and she takes it. >> cousin elizabeth, you can see before you the happiest of men! >> reporter: charlotte lucas' lot was not the "happiest." but better than penury, one imagines. >> she said, i'm just going to take the solution. >> reporter: in anthony trollope's ph
collins, who delivers the worst proposal ever to lizzy bennet in "pride and prejudice..." >> i am wellware that 1,000 pounds is all you may ever be entitled to, but rest assured i shall never reproach on that score when we are married! >> ...you're not that wealthy, you're not that pretty, you have an offer on the table today, from me. you'd better take it. >> reporter: it's the great economic risk faced by all jane austen's bennett girls. but, says desai: >>...
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Jul 23, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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exxon was under a lot of pressure when trump appointed it ceo of exxon rex tillerson put bennet exxon his entire working life. had never worked anywhere but exxon. worked there for 41 years, and so it is a continuation of all that come of that road, that same road from dulles to cheney the tillerson. and, of course, trump himself. at least tillerson divested from exxon before becoming secretary of state. trump has just emerged it seems the trump organization with the white house. >> host: except as you talk about so eloquently in the book, this is now the ultimate giveaway to corporate america. so maybe we should talk about how the initial, we're not even six months into this administration, and what has this administration been doing to go through the top wishlist of the fossil fuel companies, of the bankers, of the military and actual complex, what are the items we already see that as please corporate america? >> guest: sure, yeah. and i do think they should be getting a lot more attention, medea because is a lot of this focus exposing what some people believe is a conspiracy betwee
exxon was under a lot of pressure when trump appointed it ceo of exxon rex tillerson put bennet exxon his entire working life. had never worked anywhere but exxon. worked there for 41 years, and so it is a continuation of all that come of that road, that same road from dulles to cheney the tillerson. and, of course, trump himself. at least tillerson divested from exxon before becoming secretary of state. trump has just emerged it seems the trump organization with the white house. >> host:...
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Jul 11, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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bennet: thank you, mr. president. i thank the senator for his leadership on this bill and on health care over the decades. he knows something about the right way of doing it rather than the wrong way of doing it which is partly why i am on the floor today. i will saying is that i think will be uncontroversial to people at home and maybe news to people here. and that is whether you support the affordable care act or whether you don't support the affordable care act, whether you've been a supporter of obamacare or whether you're a supporter of what is it called obamacare. in general, people are pretty dissatisfied with our health care system at home. in general people are pretty dissatisfied with the rate their insurance goes up. they are pretty dissatisfied with the fact that a lot of people are still uncovered in this country. if they are a senior, they are pretty satisfied -- not just the idea, but with the practice that month after month after month, people have to cut their medicines in half just to get through the
bennet: thank you, mr. president. i thank the senator for his leadership on this bill and on health care over the decades. he knows something about the right way of doing it rather than the wrong way of doing it which is partly why i am on the floor today. i will saying is that i think will be uncontroversial to people at home and maybe news to people here. and that is whether you support the affordable care act or whether you don't support the affordable care act, whether you've been a...
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Jul 29, 2017
07/17
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CNNW
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. >> is the john bennet trial turning into a circus?omes into it i think larry. the fear that he said, gosh if we don't cover it big time our competition is and one they cover it big times there's going to be a jump in the ratings. and if we want to survive we got to do it. >> we also see a whole army of commentators, people who make their business talking about the news. >> what i say is what we should do, is we should bomb his capability of producing oil. take out his refineries, his stations stations -- >> they don't have any capability for producing oil. >> well they're certainly selling a -- >> it's much cheaper to have someone in your studio than to have reporters out in the field reporting. >> i don't know if any of this is true, but what identify heard is that the father wen down, opened this basement room which is fbi has bypassed. >> every single sentence on cnn, perhaps on cnbc, on fox on msnbc begins with the words i think. but after a while people get confused by what is speculation, what is fact. and as far as the viewer i
. >> is the john bennet trial turning into a circus?omes into it i think larry. the fear that he said, gosh if we don't cover it big time our competition is and one they cover it big times there's going to be a jump in the ratings. and if we want to survive we got to do it. >> we also see a whole army of commentators, people who make their business talking about the news. >> what i say is what we should do, is we should bomb his capability of producing oil. take out his...
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Jul 9, 2017
07/17
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WCAU
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. >>> valentine's day, 1994, was two days away, but mary bennet's heart was already racing and for all wrong reasons. her daughter cathy torrez never came home after her shift at sav-on ended. and the next morning, there was still no sign of her. mary called cathy's friends and no one had seen her. so mary got in the car and scoured the streets of placentia, searching for cathy and her red toyota corolla. cathy's sister tina saw the wrenching worry in their mother's face. >> she was a mom full of pain. she was a mom who -- who was hurting because she was looking for her baby. she would say, "just find the car." if you find the car, it was like an equation. find the car, you'll find cathy. >> reporter: you get any sleep sunday night? >> no. just waiting. >> reporter: you don't wanna call the police because that makes it real? >> that's right. it makes it real because you're still holding onto the hope that she's going to come running in through that backdoor. >> reporter: by monday, cathy still wasn't home. panic was setting in and mary called the police department to report her daughte
. >>> valentine's day, 1994, was two days away, but mary bennet's heart was already racing and for all wrong reasons. her daughter cathy torrez never came home after her shift at sav-on ended. and the next morning, there was still no sign of her. mary called cathy's friends and no one had seen her. so mary got in the car and scoured the streets of placentia, searching for cathy and her red toyota corolla. cathy's sister tina saw the wrenching worry in their mother's face. >> she...
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Jul 28, 2017
07/17
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CSPAN2
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bennet: thank you, mr. president mr. president. i appreciate so much my colleagues being out here on the floor. we're debating a bill that relates to 16% of our gross domestic product, almost 20% of our economy. and i wish that there were folks on the other side of the aisle that were out here tonight having this debate. so i thank my colleague from minnesota for the point that she made. and i want to say, mr. president, that i am really discouraged about where we are in our political system right now. and part of that is because politicians seem to think they can say one thing when they're running for office and do another thing when they get here. and that somehow there's not a consequence. and i guess one of the reasons that people think there is a no consequence is we have begun to treat edited content, journalism as though somehow it's inferior to somebody just shooting their mouth off on the internet. and you hear the president assaulting journalists who have -- verbally, assaulting journalists who have covered terrorism, try
bennet: thank you, mr. president mr. president. i appreciate so much my colleagues being out here on the floor. we're debating a bill that relates to 16% of our gross domestic product, almost 20% of our economy. and i wish that there were folks on the other side of the aisle that were out here tonight having this debate. so i thank my colleague from minnesota for the point that she made. and i want to say, mr. president, that i am really discouraged about where we are in our political system...