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00:00We're turning the tables. You ask questions on our YouTube videos and we're putting them to the
00:10test. This is straight from you, where your comments drive the reporting and we add clarity
00:15when the facts get a bit muddy. All right, let's start with the big one, the Epstein files. We got
00:19a question from at far to far or fair to fair who asks, so if it's under investigation, they can
00:27just redact everything because it's linked to an active investigation? Well, the short answer,
00:32they're not supposed to. The longer answer, active investigation is a really big loophole.
00:39Here's what the law actually says. The Department of Justice has to release its Epstein files,
00:43but it can withhold the following. Victims' names and medical details, child sex abuse material,
00:50graphic images of abuse or death, properly classified national security details,
00:55and anything that would jeopardize an active federal investigation or prosecution.
01:00What the DOJ cannot do is black out something just because it's embarrassing, politically sensitive,
01:06or damaging to a public figure. Attorney General Pam Bondi has to give Congress a detailed report
01:12explaining every single redaction and the legal reason behind it. Where your question gets real
01:18is at that active investigation point and clause. President Trump has already ordered Bondi to
01:24investigate Epstein's ties to specific people, and legal experts warn that gives the DOJ plenty of room
01:32to say, this touches our investigation, we can't release it. And inside government, the culture is to
01:38over-redact, never under-redact, if you will. So no, they can't block out everything or black out everything,
01:45but yes, some of the most sensitive material could stay under heavy black ink for a very long time.
01:51Doug wrote that his class is celebrating the end of the government shutdown,
01:56and they want to know why Blue Origin's rocket runs on methane. Okay, so let's talk rocket fuel.
02:03Blue Origin's new Glenn Booster uses BE-4 engines that burn liquid oxygen and liquefied natural gas,
02:10mostly methane. Why methane? It's efficient and relatively low cost. It's widely available.
02:16It helps pressurize its own tanks. Fewer parts, less weight. And it burns cleaner than kerosene.
02:24Cleaner engines matter because soot from kerosene rockets can clog hardware and makes reuse harder.
02:30Methane avoids that. It's a better fit for a rocket designed to fly more than once.
02:36The new Glenn switches to liquid hydrogen on the upper stage for maximum efficiency in space.
02:41So, for your classroom and this anchor who just learned an awful lot,
02:46methane gives power, efficiency, clean engines, and faster reuse. Hope that helps.
02:52All right, keep those questions coming on our Straight Arrow News YouTube page.
02:55We see them, we read them, and we love that you're part of this.
02:58We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:00We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:01We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:02We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:03We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:04We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:05We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:06We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:07We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:08We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:09We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:10We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:11We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:12We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:13We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:14We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:15We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
03:16We'll tackle more of your big ones next week.
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