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According to KPHO, Phoenix's news leader, boys and girls across America are soaking tampons in vodka and literally getting drunk off their asses. (03:48)
Michigan Senate Republicans pants an anti-bullying law and stuff it in a locker, adding moral and religious exemptions to it. (05:11)
The USDA launches an attack on the American school lunch tradition of fried tater tots, and Yum! Brand applies for inclusion in the food stamp program. (05:46)
Stephen knows that if Socialists had their druthers, no one would own their own druthers. (03:43)
Melinda Gates believes employing effective teachers is the single most important thing that can be done to fix America's public school system. (06:47)
Michael Moore describes the defining moment that transformed him from a quiet kid into an outspoken social critic. (05:58)
Schools should only teach gay history if they teach gay is history, "The Today Show" cooking segment gets out of control, and neuroscientist David Eagleman talks brains. (00:35)
California's school curriculum includes lesson plan-on-man action, and Disney will teach Chinese kids words like "Mickey," "Mouse," and "Sew that Mickey Mouse hoodie faster." (06:15)
Michael Sandel uses real-world examples to test big philosophical concepts and ethical questions about justice and cannibalism. (07:10)
Jose Antonio Vargas explains which is more difficult: coming out of the closet as a gay man or as a border gay. (06:18)
Congress rejects raising the debt ceiling, and Salman Khan teaches over 53 million students. (00:27)
Barack Obama releases his long-form birth certificate, but Donald Trump wants the president's Occidental records. (05:34)
Morgan Spurlock pulls the curtain back on product placement and advertising in "The Greatest Movie Ever Sold." (06:08)
CNBC's Larry Kudlow sees the good news in Japan's earthquake, and global food prices skyrocket. (05:38)
Stephen talks to Simon de Pury and checks out the competition at the Phillips de Pury Gallery. (07:40)
Bill O'Reilly shows violent footage while talking about the peaceful Wisconsin teachers' union protests, and Republicans sponsor a bill that will prohibit prank calls. (04:23)
Chris Matthews remembers John F. Kennedy as a war hero who was the first president to stand up for civil rights. (06:31)
North Carolina Tea Partiers want to reverse socially engineered progress until things get so bad for the poor that they can't be ignored. (04:53)
NewSouth Books doesn't go far enough with its censorship of "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." (03:24)
Strippers will need stronger g-strings if the dollar gets converted back to gold, and Geoffrey Canada advocates for education reform. (00:27)