Crosstalk: April 3, 2015
Jim Schneider hosted this news round-up program that featured the following stories: --As many as 150 dead in Al-Shabab attack at a university in Kenya. --Agreement to an outline is reached in nuclear talks with Iran. --Iranian troops heading to Israel's northeast border. --Iran placing guided warheads on Hezbollah rockets. --Iranian journalist defects while covering nuclear talks. Accuses America's negotiating team of working on behalf of Iran. --Israel's Netanyahu condemns framework of nuclear talks. --Iran declares that Israel's destruction is non-negotiable. --Prestigious Islamic university advocates eating dead human beings such as Jews, Christians and other non-believers if it is by necessity. --2 women suspected of being terrorist sympathizers arrested for allegedly plotting to detonate pressure cooker bombs in New York City. --Black clad graduates for ISIS clutching AK-47's inspired to change the world. --Islamic State said to be likely to attack Italy within weeks. --Al Qaeda militants in Yemen storm the center of a coastal city freeing about 300 inmates. --Indiana pizza parlor owned by Christians targeted by media as example of bigotry against homosexuals. The business has now been shut down due to threats of violence. --U.S. District Judge rules that Obamacare allows transgenders to sue if they feel they've been discriminated against by a health care provider. --Editors with a Swedish language officials dictionary will be adding a new gender neutral pronoun to the lexicon starting in April. --Ted Cruz announces that if he's elected he will undo all of President Obama's illegal and unconstitutional executive orders within 24 hours. --LifeWay Christian stores in Nashville in the process of removing literature from bookstore shelves that deal with 'heaven tourism.' --House panel on Benghazi summons Hillary Clinton to testify before them concerning her e-mail account. --Abortion clinic in Maryland has a spa-like atmosphere in order to take away the stigma. --Texas legislature set to pass the first reform to the Texas Advanced Directives Act (HB-3074) in 12 years.