
June 6, 2018
Good morning from Washington, where the Senate is going to break with tradition by staying in session for most of August. Rachel del Guidice reports on why. Fresh from a Supreme Court victory, a baker tells Ken McIntyre that he's ready to make wedding cakes again. The nation's top immigration official throws shade. Fred Lucas was there. What's not so hot about climate change? Rob Bluey talks with a politically incorrect author. Plus: Dennis Prager on Google's cowardly decision, Walter Williams on America and firearms, and Hans von Spakovsky on a fierce fight by the Marines.
"Essentially, there's no statistically significant global warming. We had a thing called 'the pause.' They didn’t like that, so they actually went back in the records and erased the pause. They changed the date," says author Marc Morano.
"We've had customers that have been coming in for years, and have looked forward to being able to do their wedding cakes," says Jack Phillips. "And for the government to take that away from me—hopefully, now that will be behind us, and we’ll move forward."
President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared: "These men are lately drawn from the ways of peace. They fight not for the lust of conquest. They fight to end conquest. They fight to liberate."
To the heads of Google and thousands of its elite employees, it is immoral to aid in the defense of their country, and all war is immoral.
"We still have 271 nominations to confirm, and we must complete the appropriations process before the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30," says Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga.
"A lot of these illegal immigrants are using the Social Security numbers of U.S. citizens. There is identity theft. There is tax fraud. There is trafficking," says Thomas Homan, acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The words Sgt. Major Daniel Joseph "Dan" Daly yelled at his men as they started the battle are carved in stone at the Marine Corps museum outside Quantico, Virginia: "Come on you sons of b—–s, do you want to live forever?"
The facts of our history should confront us with a question: With greater accessibility to guns in the past, why wasn't there the kind of violence we see today, when there is much more restricted access to guns?
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