Nigerian girls, climate change, public prayer

Watch the show.

The biggest story this week is the kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls. Last month, the terrorist group Boko Haram kidnapped hundreds of girls from their school and without prescription viagra capsules online threatened to sell them into slavery—all because their education, they say, is a sin. The U.S. has sent advisors to Nigeria to help find them, but will it be enough? How far should the U.S. go to bring the girls back to safety?

Another big story this week was a new report from the White House on climate change. According to the http://fcroji.com/buy-cialis-california/ report, the effects of climate change are already upon us in the form of extreme weather such as floods, drought, tornadoes, and hurricanes. But is the White House being alarmist by attributing individual weather events to a broad theory like climate change? Does it risk sounding like a broken record?

Also this week, the Supreme Court ruled that opening city council meetings with prayer does not violate the First Amendment. The court said that, given that the American founders—the very people who passed the first amendment—began their own meetings with overtly Christian prayer, it cannot be that such conduct violates the Constitution. Did the Court get it right?

Nick Brana, formerly of the besthotwaterrecirculators.com ventolin Terry McAuliffe campaign; political consultant Leif Larson, communications consultant Don Owens, and policy analyst Ethan Roberts discuss.

facebooktwittergoogle_plusredditpinterestlinkedinmail