artillery fire on both sides was constant this. entire villages were wiped off the map and. never before had so many soldiers been killed in such a limited area. or dead man s hill was the scene of particularly bitter fighting. at the end of the battle one of the hills two summits was ten meters lower than it was before. served as a laboratory for testing new weapons the german army fired poison gas in shells here for the first time. this allowed for more accurate targeting. the effect on french troops was devastating. the battle lasted from february to december one nine hundred sixteen. a total of about sixty million shells were fired.
when these missions corrode the casing comes off of it a lot of them you re left with stuff like t.n.t. high explosive which is a percentage of so now you have the constituent weight on the bottom of the ocean which will continually. put stuff in the environment like that for the next thousand years. these materials accumulate in the ecosystem and po
Forward and that that wasn t something that he needed to do, that he had a son and his son needed him and me and that he couldn t leave us. eventually it all came to that anyway. first, val and rusty divorced. and then in november 2011, three and a half years after the night susie was murdered i got a phone call in the middle of the night. it was really impossible to believe that. rusty, her brother, 32 years old, died by suicide. we ve already lost susie. this can t be happening, too, you know. so it was really hard for my brain to wrap around that. so jack and marlene went to the little cemetery in circle to lay another child to rest. it crushed them, and then to lose their two youngest, it just seemed like they aged 15 years.
And join a convoy, hopinge ing is safety in numbers then in villages, buses take people to the west for safety. those checkpoints were interesting, and we drilled down and asked people about them. the first couple checkpoints closest to mariupol, closest to the city, were very young soldiers very young soldiers who were friendly, who were confused about why they were there. they were asking questions about what it was like inside. one checkpoint gave the family we were speaking to milk as you get further away from mariupol, you have slightly more professional and older checkpoints. that s when they took our young the young woman we were speaking to, took her phone and wiped it of all destruction pictures they asked, why do you have this picture of this house burning? she said, it was my house. they deleted everything. they deleted telegram and tiktok she couldn t leave with any information. as the troops as we ve been talking about, as russia wants to move from mariupol along the b
Of firefighters are vaccinated slightly more than that are cops. i don t know if you met these firefighters and cops, they are so head strong, so driven, part of the reason they are great at their job, prepare to lose 30% of your workforce. as usual, this mayor creates strife for a living. he couldn t leave quick enough. his lack of leadership is inexcusable. not rare go ahead. steve: i was just going to say regarding commissioner shay. one of the reasons he said that he supports the vaccine mandate is because two fire two policemen, rather, lost their lives to covid just last week and he said everybody should embrace the vaccine because it still is a killer. brian: we this thing called individual decision as a country. we also have this thing called antibody test. so many work through this before there was a vaccine we even knew where the virus came from. we thought it came from a platypus. we found out it came from a lab.
Once thriving communities 2 now only ghost towns remain. nature is reclaiming the countryside. life came to a sudden end here with a nuclear accident in nearby chernow. at the time a few people refused to leave the exclusion zone. is 90 years old she couldn t bring herself to leave her animals behind to starve and she couldn t imagine a new life in a city apartment. nasheed get here when you would almost everyone from our village who was resettled is dead now. only one man and a few women from my village are left. it women are a bit stronger anyway almost all the men are dead he. believes as husband died in 2016 now her son leonid lives with her. he couldn t leave his mother to fend for herself and she didn t want to move to belarus capital minsk with it s
What neal it was surprising and it s one of the more visible effects of dioxin poisoning that poor people know. and estimated three million vietnamese came into direct contact with defoliants that contain dioxin. it s not known what long term effects this exposure may have had on their health. this woman was at the battle of hamburger hill she couldn t leave her infant daughter behind because she was still breastfeeding the americans flew over and sprayed agent orange the child was directly exposed to it and has been paralyzed ever since. but it s extremely difficult to prove the presence of dioxin in vietnam there s only one laboratory that has the capacity to do it. the most toxic element in
New york times about the reporting? he says this was a smear, but he can t deny the facts. and the facts are he did pay $32 million. he might not like the way the story was framed. he might think the times was coming after him, but i never heard of someone paying $32 million to settle or to stop a sexual harassment lawsuit. it just doesn t happen. harvey weinstein who s accused of many worse crimes, he s been accused of tape by some women. o reilly has not. $32 million is unheard of. it talks about nonsun sensual. it could mean this legal analyst, she was in relationship with bill o reilly and felt she couldn t leave. i don t know. 21st century fox says that they knew of the allegations and repeated harassments in a
In the thick of the protests since yesterday. keir, i guess i could say i m happy you don t have a helmet on at have very moment, but the situation still seems very scary. we are back on the streets again. let me give you a look. you saw the group of riot police here. more have just arrived, more further back, moving in to control a crowd in that direction, who are looking right now more peaceful than they did yesterday, some of the scenes that we witnessed. but through the morning we have seen vehicles, we have seen tires slashed. the first lady at one point told she couldn t leave. asking for reinforcements. it is not a picture of a situation under control.
She is a refugee. she had a work permit here in the united states, living in los angeles, working at a grocery store. when she got her, she was told she couldn t leave. we were told that border patrol looked through her cell phone, her luggage and after questioning her for about 24 hour, decided that she could go. once again, you u see this crowd here. at lax. these people are not going anywhere anytime soon. dan simon at lax. thank you. earlier today, president trump tweeted, he said our country needs strong borders and extreme vetting now. look at what is happening. a horrible mess. we want to show you some numbers now. the cato institute has tally ie the number of americans killed by citizens of the seven countries banned from 1975. from iraq, zero. iran, zero. syria, zero. from somalia, zero.
And they said don t worry about it continue with the process. so don t worry about it continue, you are here with your ailing mother, everything should be fine, that 90 days then elapses. and then when he tried to return, to be with you, what did he find out. he he had overstayed his visa and we completed the paperwork. they insisted he went back to london to complete the final interview. i traveled back with him to london. and at that point they turned around and said to us you can t travel back. you are barred. 10 years violation. you have got to stay out of the country for 10 years. exactly. pause you were here at the time when your wife was dying. right. and then she passed away. they were together 70 years. he couldn t leave her side. he was devastated after she passed. we had letters from his physician here in the united states saying that he couldn t live on his own. he was a is a diabetic and he needed care.