gigi: pinky and rocky. simi: there was an uprising in poland. david: and then the family broke apart. michael: they scattered around in different places. gigi: they worked hard. simi: and built new lives. michael: but rocky and pinky s families didn t see each other again. all: .until now. david: more than 100 years later, ancestry helped connect us to our ancestors and each other. this.
power that we never had before as just an individual parent lining up to speak at a school board meeting. reporter: the power of that collective voice is alarming some democrats like michael carabinos. i am here again. reporter: who has also been attending school board meetings to provide a counterbalance. they re doing a good job of stirring up emotion. when it comes down to actually walking in the voting booth, that there are enough of us who are able to look at the science, look at education with a level head, and look at this race with a level head. we don t need somebody as extreme as youngkin in the governor s mansion. reporter: as early voting is well underway, that view is being tested here in che chesterfield county, a sprawling stretch in virginia just below richmond. thank you. have a great day. you do the same. the long-time gop stronghold has gone democratic in recent elections. this race could signal whether
during the pandemic last year, dodson became an unlikely activist, attending school board meetings and arguing that students should be in the classroom, not virtually. by myself, i felt powerless. as a collective group, your voice is stronger and holds power that we never had before as just an individual parent lining up to speak at a school board meeting. reporter: the power of that collective voice is alarming some democrats like michael carabinos. i am here again. reporter: who has also been attending school board meetings to provide a counterbalance. they re doing a good job of
we see it with the fda advisory committee, cdc advisory committees. the u.s. preventative task force, they also have this this committee that basically gets together. it s several scientists more than a dozen scientists who specialize in this area. they look at lots of data and then they make recommendations on all sorts of things. you know, mammograms. psa testing. and then things like baby aspirin. so i get where it s confusing, again. but again, for someone like you, anderson, because you have been taking it for a while, obviously, at the recommendation of your doctor, you shouldn t stop it. no one is saying based on these draft recommendations, that the aspirin should be stopped. sanjay gupta, appreciate it. thank you. got it. up next, we are going to take you to virginia where former democratic governor terry mcauliffe and republican glenn youngkin are in a tight race for governor. but what may be the most interesting is which voters are deciding the race and why why t
reporter: in dueling tv ads terry mcauliffe, putting politics over parents. glenn youngkin would bring donald trump and betsy devos education policy to virginia. reporter: terry mcauliffe, the state s former democratic governor, and glenn youngkin, a republican businessman, are locked in a bitter fight over the role of government in schools. my name is amy dodson, i have two untstudents at the high sch. reporter: during the pandemic, she became an unlikely activist, attending school board meetings, arguing students should be in the classroom, not learning virtually. by myself, i felt very powerless. as a collective group, your voice is stronger and holds more power that we never had before as just an individual parent lining up to speak at a school board meeting. reporter: the power of that collective voice is alarming some democrats like michael carabinos. i am here again. reporter: who has also been attending school board meetings to provide a counterbalance.