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Transcripts For BBCNEWS Click 20240609

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and campaigning continues across the uk ahead of the general election injuly. it s expected that parties will set out their manifestos over the next week. now on bbc news, click. this week, we re heading into space to find out how we ll live, work and eat on the moon. we have space homes and a spacewoman... all of a sudden, it clicked in my head. wow, the international space station is a submarine in space. ..moon bots and moon dust. the surface is fine and powdery. i can pick it up loosely with my toe. you know, i think i ve seen that chap somewhere before. jfk: we choose to go - to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard. i neil armstrong: it s one small step for man... - ..one giant leap for mankind. 52 years ago, we laid our last footprint on the moon. as the crew of apollo 17 left the surface, they didn t know that gene cernan would be the last person to walk on another world for quite a while. we re on our way, houston. but now, in this decade, finally... ..we re going back. mission control: and lift—off of artemis 1. nasa s artemis programme will, in the next year or two, return us to our neighbour. part of its mission — to land the first woman and the first person of colour on the moon. another part — to use what we learn here to send the first astronauts to mars. this is where it all began — florida s kennedy space center — named after the president who made the original pledge to go to the moon. and now, this place is at the centre of even grander plans, because this time, we re notjust visiting the moon — we want to stay. this is gateway, humanity s first space station that will orbit another world. it will go round the moon every seven days. and, like the international space station above earth, astronauts will call this place home . although, where the iss can accommodate up to 12 astronauts and is comparable to a five— or six—bedroom house, gateway will be...more cosy. gateway is a studio apartment. it s... we re going to have room for our four astronauts, multiple docking ports, so we can bring our orion crew transportation ship, we can bring logistics, and we can dock a lander. these four explorers won t all be cooped up on board for the whole time, though. two will actually be spending a week or two on location, down on the lunar surface. it s a chance to further study the landscape and hopefully find a location for our next giant leap — a permanent moon base. gateway will be there before we put a habitat on the surface. gateway allows us to access any point on the lunar surface. when we went with apollo, we had to pick that spot on the moon and go to it. gateway will give us the opportunity to go down at different locations. the first section of gateway could be launched as early as 2025, with new modules then being added from 2027. a lunar base is admittedly further out and it comes with risk, but also reward. so, how do we make that a reality? to find out, it s time for me to take one small step of my own. oh, wow. i can instantly see the dust kind of kicking up. yeah. it s really fine, isn t it? it leaves the footprints like you d expect. oh, my gosh. that s brilliant. and this is how moon dust behaves, itjust puffs up like that? it does, yeah. it s so fine. welcome to swamp works... ..the dusty, dirty lab where they work with simulated moon dust. now, the loose soil that covers the lunar surface is called regolith. it s extremely fine, very sharp on a microscopic scale, and it gets everywhere. so when we landed with apollo 11, we didn t know what the surface of the moon exactly was going to be like. you ll notice from some of the footage, the landing pads are quite huge on the landing legs and the ladder s far away from the surface. there was a lot of concern of, how much will this lander sink into the surface? how fluffy is this regolith? the surface is fine and powdery. i can...| can pick it up loosely with my toe. in fact, it s because the eagle lander didn t sink in as much as expected that neil armstrong had to take such a giant leap from the bottom rung of the ladder. today, swamp works is developing robots that can cope with and take advantage of lunar soil. and it will be very useful. see, moon dust is made of materials like silicon dioxide and calcium oxide, which all contain a lot of oxygen. if we could mine the regolith and use chemical processes to extract the oxygen, we could make our own breathable air and our own rocket fuel. the way space flight exploration has been working right now is imagine you re going on a holiday with your family, you re going on a long road trip, thousands of miles, right? right now, we are bringing a trailer behind us with all the gas, you know, that we need with us, all the fuel, everything that we need comes with us. so we want to change that paradigm. we want to... and one of the biggest things that makes the biggest impact is the fuel, right? if we can source some of that from the moon and eventually from mars, that will allow us to bring more and to go more often. making our own fuel makes regular trips to and from the gateway space station much more viable. now, mining moon dust is called isru... and, because they love an acronym round these parts, the robot to do this will be called the isru pilot excavator, ipex. we had to really reinvent how you do excavation for doing mining on the moon, and eventually mars. the challenge is the technology we have for mining here on earth relies on a lot of mass and a lot of weight, right? the more steel you put on an excavator, the heavier it becomes and the better it digs. we can t launch something as heavy as we want on a rocket. it s still very expensive, right? so we have to reduce the mass of what we put on rockets. and then when you land it on the moon, it weighs one—sixth of what it does here on earth, right? imagine, like, trying to dig as if you were on ice, right? it will just scoot across the surface. the scoop will not engage and you won t be able to collect anything. so the way the robot scoops up the dust is using this thing called a bucket drum. and it s got a kind of spiral in there. and if it turns it one way, it scoops the soil, which gradually works its way towards the middle and stays there. like that. and then when it wants to unload... ..it turns it the other way and it all comes out again. we put them on opposite ends of the robot and when it excavates, it s using both sets of drums at the same time, but they re digging in opposite directions. so one is pulling it that way and one is pulling it that way... right. ..and pulling itself down to the surface. yeah. one of the main dangers faced by extraterrestrial rovers is getting stuck. so, as an added bonus, ipex s scoops and arms can also help it to get out of a hole orflip it over if it takes a tumble. one of its other defences will keep its cameras free from all that electrostatic dust, which will cling to every part of it. its lenses will be fitted with an electrodynamic dust shield. simply apply electricity and the charged dust particles are repelled, keeping its vision clear. but after a while of going to and fro, we might want to stay a little longer on the surface. robots like this one will prepare the ground for permanent buildings by smoothing and compacting the foundations. do you have a name for this arm? um... we call it... we call it meercat, actually. you ve always got cool names for these things! yeah. why? it s called the multipurpose end effector for regolith acquisition... meercat. .. ..transportation and... yeah, yeah, that s it. you see, what worries me is there are some brilliant inventions you guys haven t bothered with because you couldn t think of a cool acronym. a cool name. that is like one of the... it s very important to have a good name for your projects because it, like, represents the soul of the project, right? now, just like the fuel situation, we can t take building materials with us to the moon either — we have to make our structures from moon dust. these bricks and blocks and bars have all been made by mixing and melting regolith with plastic. in the future, giant sd printers will build shelters to protect those living on a world with no atmosphere from radiation, asteroid and micrometeoroid impacts, moonquakes and temperatures ranging from +100 to —200 degrees celsius. even replacement parts can be made from regolith. so this is a wheel that has been printed with regolith and polymer. ok. this is another example of what we can do if we capture the resources from the moon. now, do you know, i ve seen and held wheels for rovers before, full—size wheels, and they re really light. right. but this is really heavy. yes, this is the opposite. because those wheels that are light, especially if you re sending it on a rocket, they need to be light because it s expensive. this is heavy because it s made on the moon. and heavy wheels are a good thing, i guess. it s better, right? especially for a digger like that. like the more weight that we have on the excavator, the better it s going to perform. would you believe you can even make rope out of regolith? this is made from basalt glass — really, really thin fibres, a bit like optic fibre. so you could even make rope out of moon dust. these are hopeful times for space exploration, but it s always been a risky endeavour. im—i odysseus — lunar lander separation confirmed. this year, we ve seen three probes sent to the moon. two made it, and both of those had, shall we say, awkward landings. and the artemis mission to put boots back on the lunar ground has been pushed back to 2026 at the earliest. but nasa says space explorers need to take these setbacks in their stride. i don t see it as a disappointment. it s very cliche to say space is hard, but what we re endeavouring to do is highly complex. we expect challenges along the way so this doesn t surprise us and we re pushing forward. it sounds really expensive to do space exploration. is it, and is it worth it? so, yes, it s really expensive. it was really expensive for us to explore this planet, really expensive to lay rail infrastructure, to lay highway infrastructure, to put the infrastructure in place that allows us to travel in air traffic around this globe. it s absolutely necessary for us to lay that critical infrastructure for going to space, because what we learn in that endeavour is tremendous. the exponential growth that we ve seen in the world in technology is because of great endeavours like this. it s absolutely worth it. here in the united states, every year the general population is spending as much money on potato chips as our budget is every year to go out to the moon. that s a good figure. the motivation may be different to that of the space race of the 1960s, but the size of the ambition is just as great today as we shoot for the moon once again. i m alistair keane with this week s tech news. google has confirmed it s started restricting election—related questions on its ai chatbot gemini. if a user asks the chatbot about a political party or candidate, it would tell them to try google search instead. they started rolling out the measure in india. the plan is to expand to other countries where big elections are taking place. the european parliament has approved the world s first framework for regulating the risks of artificial intelligence. the ai act works by classifying products according to risk and adjusting scrutiny accordingly. the law s creators say it will make the tech more human—centric. however, the act still has to pass several more steps before it formally becomes law. a surgical team at cromwell hospital in london have come the first in europe to use applevision pro to perform two microsurgery spine procedures. with xx software, the apple headset allowed some in the team to have touch—free access when assessing up the surgery and offered them visualisations that were previously unavailable. and fancy wearing sunglasses that can quickly swipe to become reading glasses? well, deep optics have you covered with their newly created 32n glasses. users can transition between the two settings thanks to liquid crystal lenses. they contain pixels and tiny electronic controls. i never dreamed that i could become an astronaut. i m talking to kayla barron... ..one—time resident of the international space station and now part of the artemis crew, the team who are preparing to go back to the moon. first time i looked out the window of our capsule... ..i6 sunrises and sunsets each day over our beautiful planet, really fundamentally feeling this interconnectedness. everything each one of us does has an impact on the people, notjust immediately around us, but on the entire planet. that inspired me to be really deliberate about, what contribution am i going to make to leave a better, healthier, more connected, more cooperative planet? what inspired you to become an astronaut? i did decide from a pretty early age that i wanted to serve in the military, and ultimately found my way to the naval academy and to the navy and to the submarine force in particular. and i met an astronaut at a navy football game, and hearing her story just reminded me so much of my experience on the submarine. and all of a sudden it clicked in my head, wow, the international space station is a submarine in space. and i told her that and she said, it totally is. it s exactly the same. you have these really complex machines out in these extreme environments that are designed to keep human beings alive in a place we re not meant to be, really, which is deep under the surface of the ocean or in the vacuum of space, and notjust keep us alive, but also allow us to accomplish a mission, do something as a team that s of value to others. what do you think it might be like to live on the moon and then mars? well, the moon is beautiful from the space station, first of all. when the sun is reflecting off this sphere, it s notjust...you know, a crescent moon, a sliver in the sky. it felt like you could just reach out and grab it, and i think made me realise how incredible it is going to be to send human beings back. and there s incredible scientific questions we re going to be able to answer. we re planning to return to the moon, but this time, to the lunar south pole. so we ll be exploring a different area than we visited during the apollo era. answer some really fundamental questions not only about the moon s formation and its geology, but about our entire solar system. you are part of the artemis team. the artemis 3 crew is the one, i suppose, that everyone wants to be on, cos i think that s the one where the people are going to stand on the moon. are you in with a chance of being on artemis 3? of course. everyone in our office dreams of the opportunity to be part of those crews. you wait and hope. but the really cool thing is even if you re not in that seat on the flight, you get to support them and be a part of the team that makes that happen. the artemis 3 mission, they will put the first woman and the first person of colour on the moon. i m guessing that those two people will become as famous as neil armstrong. put yourself in her shoes, even if it s not you. what would that represent for you? for humankind? you know, i think that moment will really represent how far we ve come. you know, we did amazing things in the apollo era, but not everyone had the access to those opportunities. there have been women in the nasa astronaut office for a really long time doing really incredible things. so we ll be standing on those women s shoulders. the first woman to command a space shuttle, the first to do a spacewalk, the first to command the space station. and when we look around at the diversity of our office, it s really incredible, like, who we have around us. it will be this incredible, historic, iconic moment that i think young women and girls around the planet will look to as an example of the fact that you can do anything if you work hard and are supported by the systems, the communities around you to have an opportunity to achieve those goals. you might have seen space food before. but what about space plants? if nasa wants its astronauts to stay out in space for longer, they ll need to be able to replenish their own food supply. this is nothing new. astronauts have been growing crops in space for the past a0 years. but there s still an awful lot that scientists are trying to learn about space farming. we have things like radiation that we have to deal with. we also have issues with microgravity. plants have learned how to detect gravity with their roots and gravity—sensing organelles in the plants, and so they know how to use these cues. and without these cues, they have to re—adapt to this environment. so, without gravity, the next cue that they use is light. so, how to go up and down, how to orient themselves is based on light now, cos they don t have gravity. water behaves very differently in microgravity. it has a high surface tension, so it likes to cling. and when the water clings to the roots, it prevents the roots from breathing. and so the plants can experience things like drought stress. they mayjust look green to you and me, but plants appear very different when viewed in the infrared and ultraviolet parts of the spectrum. and the scientists here are learning how their appearance changes under different types of stress. here in the plant processing area, we re giving the plants a stressor. so, in this case, we re reducing its watering. because on the station, we know it s difficult to water. and so we can identify through our imaging project, using infrared and visible light, as well as fluorescence, that stress. we take all this data and to make that association we use machine learning. then we can associate the wavelengths that are most indicative of that stress and include them in a camera that would monitor the plants on station. this is where the plants live when they get up there. the veggie unit. this is how they grow stuff on the international space station? yep. it s a simple led system, as well as a bellows, so it s open to the crew environment. we have two of these and six plants each. so you can imagine we re not making a huge feast, but it s enough for a nice serving of lettuce. lovely salad. yeah. how excited are the astronauts that they can now have salad and not just space food? they re very grateful. they can have salad, we ve grown peppers as well, and they can even have flowers cos we ve grown zinnia on space. now, there is a knack to getting these seeds to sprout in space. the way you grow plants on the international space station is using this, which is a plant pillow. so, this is the wick that sucks the moisture up. you plug your water source into here and you fill the bottom with soil, and then you get your tiny seeds, which stay in these polymer wrappers so they don t zip off and you lose them around the iss. and you pop it in here, and 28 days later... ..get yourself a lettuce. aside from the obvious benefits of creating a renewable food source, there are all sorts of other advantages to growing plants in space. gardening is very therapeutic. it s something that the astronauts would say, hey, you know, let me take care of something green. it makes them happy. plants produce oxygen and they recycle waste, they recycle water. all this fundamental stuff together will make them a very important organism to take with us. when we re living on the moon and when we re living on mars, what type of plants will we be eating? we would like to have things like nuts and citrus, but, again, there s still so much we don t know about how those plants adapt to the environment. the current goal is to use hydroponic systems, which rely on water—based nutrient solutions instead of soil, which is heavy and expensive to transport. but in 2022, scientists showed that plants can grow in lunar soil, regolith. which kind of brings us full circle in a way, doesn t it? if we want to live on new worlds, we need to use the resources that they provide us instead of taking more from our home planet. this has been a fascinating trip to nasa, a place which will one day help us put builders, miners, and even farmers on the moon. hello there. it s been a pretty decent start to the weekend. there was a good deal of sunshine around across most of the country. a bit of cloud here and there, a few showers, mostly in the north. part two of the weekend doesn t look quite as good. it will start sunny, quite chilly. but we ve got a couple of weather fronts pushing down from the northwest that will increase cloud through the day, with some splashes of rain. now, we ve got this weather front approaching the northwest of the country to move through this evening. showers merging together to produce longer spells of rain for the north and west of scotland. so unsettled, breezy, showery in the north, turning cloudier for northern ireland, but clearer skies for large parts of england and wales, with lighter winds here. so it will turn chilly for most. single digits, i think, for the majority of the country. but with more cloud across northern ireland, we will fall to around 10 degrees in belfast. so, sunday, then, we ve got low pressure still towards the norwegian sea there, bringing northern westerly winds into the country. we start off with quite a bit of sunshine. scotland, england and wales, cloudy skies for northern ireland, southwest scotland, in towards northwest england, north wales. and that cloud, with splashes of rain, will spill southeastwards through the day. so it will turn cloudy across much of england and wales, probably the best of the sunshine across the far southwest, and the northern half of scotland doing pretty well, with sunny spells. but there will be blustery showers here and a cooler day to come, i think, because of more cloud around — temperatures of about 12 to 17 degrees. as we move through sunday night, that area of rain splashes across the irish sea, into much of england and wales, becomes confined to southern and eastern areas by the end of the night. so where we have the cloud and the rain, then, a less cold night here, 10 to 12 degrees under clearer skies. further north, it will turn chilly. we start to pick up a northerly wind as we move into monday. that rain slowly clears away from the south and east. it may take a while to clear the east of england. eventually, it will do. then it s a bright day for most, sunshine and showers. most of these across the northern half of scotland, where they will be quite blustery and a chilly northerly wind at that. temperatures, 10 to 14 degrees in the north, 15 to 17 further south, giving some sunny spells. and we hold on to this chilly northerly wind through tuesday, even into wednesday as well. before low pressure starts to move in from the southwest, that ll cut off the chilly northerly and temperatures will slowly recover towards the end of the week. but it s going to be a fairly unsettled and a cool week to come, with a little bit of sunshine here and there. good morning and welcome breakfast. their headlines today: the most senior diplomat in the eu has condemned the killing of palestinians in an israeli operation to rescue four hostages. the mission was to bring home the captive held in gaza since the hamas attacks, eight months ago. election campaigning continues across the country ahead of a key week in which parties will set out their manifestoes. thousands of motorcyclists arrived at the end of a mammoth right from london to cumbria. and in sport, joyful we go in a day of commemoration at wembley where rob burrow was paid tribute to, ahead of their challenge cup final. a sunny start for many of you, a more cloud, increasing, thickening and patchy rain as well. details on breakfast. good morning. the main story, israel has been criticised by the european union s matheny diplomat over the key kneeling of dozens of palestinians in an operation to rescue four hostages in gaza yesterday. josep borrell called the report another massacre of civilians. a

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Transcripts For BBCNEWS Click 20240608-720

A risky endeavour. im—i odysseus — lunar lander separation confirmed. this year, we ve seen three probes sent to the moon. two made it, and both of those had, shall we say, awkward landings. and the artemis mission to put boots back on the lunar ground has been pushed back to 2026 at the earliest. but nasa says space explorers need to take these setbacks in their stride. i don t see it as a disappointment. it s very cliche to say space is hard, but what we re endeavouring to do is highly complex. we expect challenges along the way so this doesn t surprise us and we re pushing forward. it sounds really expensive to do space exploration. is it, and is it worth it? so, yes, it s really expensive. it was really expensive for us to explore this planet, really expensive to lay rail infrastructure, to lay highway infrastructure, to put the infrastructure in place that allows us to travel in air traffic around this globe. it s absolutely necessary for us to lay that critical infrastructure for going

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS Hannity 20240608 06:13

That s whyfa your polling number said. and therefore there ought to be some kind of planning teamteam on the conservative side that they re oe co trying to im. if you were a vicious, dishonest, desperate, had the power of the fbi, the power the justice department, all the other powers that the establishepowersd one has, whatd you do in the next four months? dthey re not going to go down easily. they re not going to say, well, yes, it s trues, that.incompet joe biden is totally incompetent. yes, that s true. the world s really dangerous and getting more dangerous because he s incompetent. gerous they re going to say, what ist e it we have to do to stop trump and to stop the trump movement? and given their track record from 2015 on, i, i really worry about how radical and how dangerous they re going to be in the next five months. >> i mean, let me look at the internals of these polls. you got trump up five, arizona, trump up five in nevada.

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Gutfeld

i thagain, wto have to learn that lesson all over again, which is a shame because that generatiothatn made ite to to where we would never have to face those things again. and now we jus againt don t respect t it. so i apologize to them and their families. thank you for your servicehem ao and hopefully america wakes up. >> i m jima . you know, i was there. i was never in the military. >> my grandfather was in that war and he never talkeer wasd i. we d ask questions. you don t want to talk, so who knows what he saw? you know tal w, remember when im a kid that there was always rumors going to bring a draft back when ronaldy t got in offi, i was petrified. i don t want to go to war. goally a is what i am. you know, i tell jokes. theyi mean, i even went over to afghanistan, perform for the troops, and they re like, oh, man, you guyu re heroes her, the comedians coming over. you guys are we re just telling jokes. yeahi said. you know, and they really thought that we were like, we re not. you guys are, you know, protecting are protever us over there and some stupid war. so now i have the utmost respect for the military. >> you know what? if you were a few in then th biden family would just say,

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Jesse Watters Primetime

Jesse Watters Primetime
vimarsana.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vimarsana.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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BBC News

don t do that any more. joe, is there different strategy - don t do that any more. joe, is there different strategy for i don t do that any more. joe, is. there different strategy for each event and each leader, or is there just a sort of rule of thumb for everyone?— just a sort of rule of thumb for eve one? ., f , everyone? no, they re definitely the formats. everyone? no, they re definitely the formats- they _ everyone? no, they re definitely the formats. they make _ everyone? no, they re definitely the formats. they make a _ everyone? no, they re definitely the formats. they make a big _ everyone? no, they re definitely the formats. they make a big difference| formats. they make a big difference because _ formats. they make a big difference because when it s a one—on—one, you have _ because when it s a one—on—one, you have essentially one line of attack to be _ have essentially one line of attack to be aware of. you re sort of trying — to be aware of. you re sort of trying to _ to be aware of. you re sort of trying to anticipate what s the sort of crux _ trying to anticipate what s the sort of crux of— trying to anticipate what s the sort of crux of the question going to be. therefore. — of crux of the question going to be. therefore, do i address it or do im _ therefore, do i address it or do i... politicians often give an answer— i... politicians often give an answer anyway but says what they want _ answer anyway but says what they want to _ answer anyway but says what they want to say without answering. but then you re — want to say without answering. but then you re looking at what that sort of — then you re looking at what that sort of left field particularly if you re — sort of left field particularly if you re rishi sunak, what is going to come _ you re rishi sunak, what is going to come in _ you re rishi sunak, what is going to come in as— you re rishi sunak, what is going to come in as the attack. also what is the attack? — come in as the attack. also what is the attack? when you ve got multiple leaders. _ the attack? when you ve got multiple leaders. it s— the attack? when you ve got multiple leaders, it s a different strategy because — leaders, it s a different strategy because you re looking at... you know _ because you re looking at... you know if— because you re looking at... you know if you re sitting p:m., you get all the _ know if you re sitting p:m., you get all the incoming fire and you have to decide — all the incoming fire and you have to decide which ones you want to take out— to decide which ones you want to take out and ignore them. it should have been— take out and ignore them. it should have been to war. focus on your main rivals— have been to war. focus on your main rivals without — have been to war. focus on your main rivals without it s have been to war. focus on your main rivals withou— rivals without it s a bit of a four dimensional _ rivals without it s a bit of a four dimensional tax _ rivals without it s a bit of a four dimensional tax game. - rivals without it s a bit of a four dimensional tax game. you vel rivals without it s a bit of a four i dimensional tax game. you ve got rivals without it s a bit of a four - dimensional tax game. you ve got the person who s opposite you and you

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Americas Newsroom

know, the polling since last week is worse than even i thought. i wasn t sure how it was going to affect things. i don t know how you two thing, particularly katie. it is a little harsher for donald trump than i expected among independents and some republicans. i don t know if people will abandon him or stick with im. they ll probably stay with him. it shows a softer under belly. the idea this is better is just folly. if it was better he would be racking up 200 felonies instead of 99. >> bill: we need the let the polling play out a little bit. let everybody take it in. katie, what do you think about this? >> first to former president trump s statement about how he believes being elected would be the best revenge. he is sending a message he wants to move forward with issues that affect americans. this is something that he did after the election against hillary clinton in 2016 when people were saying we want to lock her up. no, we ll move on.

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The Context

both sides and that is why it s been such as difficult issue for them to navigate — such as difficult issue for them to navi . ate. , ~ such as difficult issue for them to naviuate. , ~ , ., ., , navigate. things like sexual assault and paternity _ navigate. things like sexual assault and paternity deaths _ navigate. things like sexual assault and paternity deaths and _ navigate. things like sexual assault and paternity deaths and diagnosis| and paternity deaths and diagnosis which takes on average eight years were a woman to get a diagnosis. those are all issues that affect women and yet, here they are today saying we are putting women first, is that the tricky issue for the conservatives could screen you can add to the list of the impact of conservative austerity policies over 14 conservative austerity policies over 1 y ., , conservative austerity policies over 1 y . conservative austerity policies over 14 years and all that has been im acted 14 years and all that has been impacted and _ 14 years and all that has been impacted and particularly. - 14 years and all that has been i impacted and particularly. there 14 years and all that has been - impacted and particularly. there are ways that _ impacted and particularly. there are ways that the — impacted and particularly. there are ways that the past _ impacted and particularly. there are ways that the past 14 _ impacted and particularly. there are ways that the past 14 years, - impacted and particularly. there are ways that the past 14 years, before i ways that the past 14 years, before that and _ ways that the past 14 years, before that and rishi _ ways that the past 14 years, before that and rishi sunak_ ways that the past 14 years, before that and rishi sunak as _ that and rishi sunak as announcement today since _ that and rishi sunak as announcement today since this — that and rishi sunak as announcement today since this is _ that and rishi sunak as announcement today since this is nothing _ that and rishi sunak as announcement today since this is nothing to _ that and rishi sunak as announcement today since this is nothing to do - today since this is nothing to do with culture _ today since this is nothing to do with culture wars _ today since this is nothing to do with culture wars the _ today since this is nothing to do i with culture wars the conservatives caring _ with culture wars the conservatives caring about — with culture wars the conservatives caring about women, _ with culture wars the conservatives caring about women, they- with culture wars the conservatives caring about women, they said - with culture wars the conservatives caring about women, they said it . with culture wars the conservatives caring about women, they said it is very important _ caring about women, they said it is very important issue _ caring about women, they said it is very important issue to _ caring about women, they said it is very important issue to a _ caring about women, they said it is very important issue to a lot - caring about women, they said it is very important issue to a lot of - very important issue to a lot of people — very important issue to a lot of people and _ very important issue to a lot of people and don t _ very important issue to a lot of people and don t want - very important issue to a lot of people and don t want to - very important issue to a lot of - people and don t want to denigrated one little _ people and don t want to denigrated one little bit— people and don t want to denigrated one little bit but— people and don t want to denigrated one little bit but the _ people and don t want to denigrated one little bit but the fact _ people and don t want to denigrated one little bit but the fact that - one little bit but the fact that done — one little bit but the fact that done this— one little bit but the fact that done this announcement - one little bit but the fact that done this announcement and| one little bit but the fact that - done this announcement and middle of an election _ done this announcement and middle of

Issue , Things , Sides , Sexual-assault , Deaths , Diagnosis , Paternity , Navi , Naviuate , Eight , Conservatives , Women

Dateline

working its way toward trial, he sat silently, mute in his cell. especially, when detective shaklee paid him a visit. detective jaclyn shaklee: he was looking at me like a caged animal. his eyes were huge. he-- it was really creepy. o-- obviously i wanted to talk to him. i wanted to get an interview with him and see if he would-- if he would tell me something, and he immediately said, im not talking to you. get-- get out of here. keith morrison : but across town, someone was communicating. after spending five weeks in icu, lydia tillman was transferred to a local rehab hospital, and a long, slow recovery began. boy #1 (home video): hi, lydia. esther hartsky: i showed her a video of my kids saying hello to her because they missed their aunt lydia. boy #2 (home video): i want you to get better soon. esther hartsky: and she got to the part where my four-year-old started to talk and she laughed and he said, hi, lydia. boy #3 (home video): hi, lydia. esther hartsky: its the first time i got to see her laugh, and i went, shes got memory, she can laugh.

Travis-dna-which-detective-nash-gurule , Way , Detective , Detective-jaclyn-shaklee , Eyes , O , Detective-shaklee , Visit , Cell , Trial , Animal , Something

Dateline

biting tension, disappearances, dead-end games of cat and mouse, detective gurule was about to get the answers hed been searching for. and he was exhausted. to celebrate and rest up, gurule decided to take a few days off with his wife. detective nash gurule: so were driving out of town, i get a call that said he pulled out. keith morrison : coming up will he or won t he? detective nash gurule: i looked at her and im-- im crying. i said, theres nothing more i could do. keith morrison : then, the moment of truth detective jaclyn shaklee: his whole demeanor changed and he let out this scream, just this blood curdle-- it made me jump. i wasnt expecting it at all keith morrison: when dateline continues. type 2 diabetes? discover the ozempic® tri-zone. ♪ ♪ i got the power of 3. i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight. in studies, the majority of people reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it.

Travis-dna-which-detective-nash-gurule , Answers , Disappearances , Games , Tension , Cat-and-mouse , Keith-morrison , Farm-town , Call , Wife , Im , He