0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
albert in chicago, democratic caller. hi, albert. caller: good morning. host: good morning. caller: yes, as far as your guest, mr. spiering, i would like to ask him a question. every republican was onboard with the trump tax cuts, so we are going to set that aside. i would like you, mr. spiering, to name just one accomplishment that mike pence had while he was the vice president. how would you rate his job performance? guest: yeah, i think that mike pence had a lot of executive experience when he was showsen -- chosen as president trump's running mate and he stepped up and really led the country during the period of the coronavirus. that was the number one issue that pence tackled and handled and i think that a majority of especially people in washington felt that he was an effective manager of that situation during the crisis moment when it was happening. pence took the leadership of a very difficult, very thorny issue and did a fairly good job. you may not disagree with him turning over control of the pandemic to dr. fauci and the way they handled it, but most people saw p
albert in chicago, democratic caller. hi, albert. caller: good morning. host: good morning. caller: yes, as far as your guest, mr. spiering, i would like to ask him a question. every republican was onboard with the trump tax cuts, so we are going to set that aside. i would like you, mr. spiering, to name just one accomplishment that mike pence had while he was the vice president. how would you rate his job performance? guest: yeah, i think that mike pence had a lot of executive experience when...
0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
there was organizing on the ground around police brutality in los angeles and new york and chicago. and there was also this mass of anti-iraq movement and obama emerged. and then people green screened it. they made him this progressive of candidate. and when he got into office, you know, he did what he had to do symbolically, we can never take away the significance of the first black presidency. you can never deny the importance of that. but in these moments, he became this kind of arc. how can one put it this kind of containing voice? right. you know what happens if obama doesn't tell the nba players to go back to the court, right. to play basketball? how how far do they push the matter? in so many ways. and so part of what i'm trying to suggest early on in the book, but again, it gets beyond it goes beyond obama. right. is that, you know, we can't read him as the fulfillment of the black freedom struggle, because when you do so, you you narrow the complexity of that struggle. that struggle is not just simply a black liberal ambition. you know, you think about the politics. you're
there was organizing on the ground around police brutality in los angeles and new york and chicago. and there was also this mass of anti-iraq movement and obama emerged. and then people green screened it. they made him this progressive of candidate. and when he got into office, you know, he did what he had to do symbolically, we can never take away the significance of the first black presidency. you can never deny the importance of that. but in these moments, he became this kind of arc. how can...
0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
there was one that was pretty high profile in chicago in 2016 at a trump rally. i wasn't at one, but, you know, you kind of never knew when the temperature was going to shift and the movie was going to turn. and it was such a know it was really such a shock for me in many ways, as you kind of thought, some of these are my people. yes. and, you know, i had i had covered republican politicians for years. i had you know, i started in public radio in nebraska as one of my friends originally nebraska here. i think. and, you know, i would talk to everybody and, you know, farmers many of them who were conservative would listen to us in their tractors and and, you know, republican members of congress their staff would would turn to us and communicated. and it was okay. it wasn't it wasn't like this, you know. so it was a normal. so fast forward to and this is where we're going to start. think if you if you want to join our conversation, we would love it. and again, i don't want this to be a fitness contest, but there's a mike over here. and if it's hard for you to get to
there was one that was pretty high profile in chicago in 2016 at a trump rally. i wasn't at one, but, you know, you kind of never knew when the temperature was going to shift and the movie was going to turn. and it was such a know it was really such a shock for me in many ways, as you kind of thought, some of these are my people. yes. and, you know, i had i had covered republican politicians for years. i had you know, i started in public radio in nebraska as one of my friends originally...
0
0.0
Apr 27, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
you're also sportswriter on fox in chicago. apparently a bodybuilder. oh, yeah. yeah, yeah. so she's the founding partner in nashville, correspondent for covering the american right. puck calls her their maga expert an insider. previously tina has served as a white house reporter for politico, a staff reporter for vanity fair. and before that, she was a journalist for a number of right wing publications like the daily caller, where she her start in journalism and in her earlier was mentored by tucker carlson. so it's it's okay. she's survived. wow. all right. she is a graduate of claremont college and her book, the maga diaries chronicles her personal experiences within the right wing movement and media media enterprises. we welcome tina is the author maga diaries. my surreal inside the right wing and how i got out out. is that except for getting out or right. we'll get to that. we'll get that. so our third panelist this morning is stephen vladeck who is the charles allen wright chair in federal courts at the university of texas law school, a nationally that i know. that's o
you're also sportswriter on fox in chicago. apparently a bodybuilder. oh, yeah. yeah, yeah. so she's the founding partner in nashville, correspondent for covering the american right. puck calls her their maga expert an insider. previously tina has served as a white house reporter for politico, a staff reporter for vanity fair. and before that, she was a journalist for a number of right wing publications like the daily caller, where she her start in journalism and in her earlier was mentored by...
0
0.0
Apr 26, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
he since mamie till up to chicago to talk to one of his old insurance brokers. his name was reverend franklin revenge for aretha franklin's father. so it's almost like all the black people in the civil rights history in history are connected somehow. the tree. howard so as he has a real house sized impact, a when you consider we don't really know. mm we don't really bring up his name lot jason go one more. so i like to know your perspective on the 13th amendment because our to fight is really to our freedom and. it's like that's like the dirty little amendment that keeps getting passed along as a way of being able to have law to control people or propagate slavery. so the except this punishment for a crime is what you're talking, but you to the thing about the 13th amendment, as it relates also to the civil rights act of 1960. well, so it relates to the civil rights act of 19. so the thing about the 13th amendment was like the black people who proposed the end of slavery had proposed a. 13th amendment right, like involuntary servitude is like there shall be no i
he since mamie till up to chicago to talk to one of his old insurance brokers. his name was reverend franklin revenge for aretha franklin's father. so it's almost like all the black people in the civil rights history in history are connected somehow. the tree. howard so as he has a real house sized impact, a when you consider we don't really know. mm we don't really bring up his name lot jason go one more. so i like to know your perspective on the 13th amendment because our to fight is really...
0
0.0
Apr 24, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in cheap labor through milton friedman through the free trade economics folks at the university of chicago way back in the seventies, that it took a while for the idea that companies should only be beholden to shareholders. but once that took flight once enough. in power decided like we should care more about the stock market than about the health of workers. that's when basically my life started. so i mean and i'm talking about 1980, you know, the chips start falling or in the late seventies, you know, the things that the z guys changed it's been in credibly destructive we know it's been incredibly destructive all i'm saying is pause stop we tried that we see the rupert cautions let's get back to where we were but let's do a better let's make sure we're clear, including all workers in this. and because as as know union is a little sketchy when it comes to people of color and women. so i think now in this moment now that we've been through the pandemic, now that we know the stakes of, offshoring, everything, i think this is a clarion call to rediscover what we used to have, that a working
in cheap labor through milton friedman through the free trade economics folks at the university of chicago way back in the seventies, that it took a while for the idea that companies should only be beholden to shareholders. but once that took flight once enough. in power decided like we should care more about the stock market than about the health of workers. that's when basically my life started. so i mean and i'm talking about 1980, you know, the chips start falling or in the late seventies,...
0
0.0
Apr 24, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and so what rush is doing in chicago, hiring people in the neighborhood and trying to build up wealth in poor neighborhoods. right. like things like that can go towards gun violence. but i agree you need people in the gun space to say what can we work with you right in this sort of thing and just if you remember one thing just remember that the entire framework of prevention is a liberal construct. and what really all the research i did in the book shows, it's common sense if you believe in anti smoking, if you believe in wearing a mask, if you believe in in a vaccine or all these things, then that framework is common sense, but it's antithesis to the common sense of people who have a gun because they don't trust the government. you're telling them that that, that when they buy a gun. they've got to put their name in a government database that is not common sense to them. and they're the people we're trying to get in our coalition ideally. and so it's just i just think even if we have a critical idea of just the idea of prevention, what that does who that who that includes that exclud
and so what rush is doing in chicago, hiring people in the neighborhood and trying to build up wealth in poor neighborhoods. right. like things like that can go towards gun violence. but i agree you need people in the gun space to say what can we work with you right in this sort of thing and just if you remember one thing just remember that the entire framework of prevention is a liberal construct. and what really all the research i did in the book shows, it's common sense if you believe in...
0
0.0
Apr 23, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
how chicago mayor lori lightfoo led and lost a city in crisis. and in may, clinton white house communications director and current abc host george stephan police wl release the situate in room the inside story of presidentsn crisis. and the newest book from washington examiner political columnist mothy carney is titled family unfriendly how our culture madeaising kids much harder than it needs to be. and one more. fox news host jesse waters, his latest is called get it together. troubling tales from the liberal fringe. and we should note that there's a new book coming out about a journalist. usa today's susan page has written a new biography about one of the most well-known broadcasters in history. barbara walters, the book, which will be released in april, is titled the rule breaker. susan page's previous bestsellers were about former speaker of the house nancy pelosi and first lady barbara bush. now, as we continue our spring book preview here are some notable upcoming titles about foreign policy. cnn's fareed zakaria will release his look at i
how chicago mayor lori lightfoo led and lost a city in crisis. and in may, clinton white house communications director and current abc host george stephan police wl release the situate in room the inside story of presidentsn crisis. and the newest book from washington examiner political columnist mothy carney is titled family unfriendly how our culture madeaising kids much harder than it needs to be. and one more. fox news host jesse waters, his latest is called get it together. troubling tales...
0
0.0
Apr 22, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and dan holt, those chicago hearings benefit. did everett dirksen, didn't they it who was running for the senate in 1950 as a republican? this is i think this is true. you know, so lucas was very wary of having these hearings dig up dirt on the democratic party in chicago that year. and sure enough, after the hearings took place, scott lucas, who has been who had been the democratic leader in the senate, lost his election to everett dirksen to the republic. and who would go on to, you know, a very long and really important career in the senate? well, one of the other places that the kefauver committee visited was las vegas. this is from the c-span archives, a little bit from the mob museum in there. a a lot of people have this image of las vegas that we always blow up buildings and we have blown up a lot of hotel casinos on the strip and replaced them with newer ones. this building was just about vacant in the late nineties and the federal government was ready to let it come down. the mayor at the time was oscar goodman, who had
and dan holt, those chicago hearings benefit. did everett dirksen, didn't they it who was running for the senate in 1950 as a republican? this is i think this is true. you know, so lucas was very wary of having these hearings dig up dirt on the democratic party in chicago that year. and sure enough, after the hearings took place, scott lucas, who has been who had been the democratic leader in the senate, lost his election to everett dirksen to the republic. and who would go on to, you know, a...
0
0.0
Apr 21, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and dan holt, those chicago hearings benefit. did everett dirksen, didn't they it who was running for the senate in 1950 as a republican? this is i think this is true. you know, so lucas was very wary of having these hearings dig up dirt on the democratic party in chicago that year. and sure enough, after the hearings took place, scott lucas, who has been who had been the democratic leader in the senate, lost his election to everett dirksen to the republic. and who would go on to, you know, a very long and really important career in the senate? well, one of the other places that the kefauver committee visited was las vegas. this is from the c-span archives, a little bit from the mob museum in there. a a lot of people have this image of las vegas that we always blow up buildings and we have blown up a lot of hotel casinos on the strip and replaced them with newer ones. this building was just about vacant in the late nineties and the federal government was ready to let it come down. the mayor at the time was oscar goodman, who had
and dan holt, those chicago hearings benefit. did everett dirksen, didn't they it who was running for the senate in 1950 as a republican? this is i think this is true. you know, so lucas was very wary of having these hearings dig up dirt on the democratic party in chicago that year. and sure enough, after the hearings took place, scott lucas, who has been who had been the democratic leader in the senate, lost his election to everett dirksen to the republic. and who would go on to, you know, a...
0
0.0
Apr 20, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
hometown of philly or chicago and that will flow through and we will see housing costs come in inflation back to target. i would be surprised if we are e not back to the federal reserve target by the second half of this year. i think all the trim lines look good despite today's numbers on the market reaction to that we will see how it ends up. but i think we're in pretty good shape there. >> reason number one for optimism and by the way it is inflation that really messed up many economists forecast of 2023 why they thought recession. i think the issue was there was a mixed diagnosis into what caused the inflation. there's lots of reasons demand and supply. at the tippy top of the reasons is supply. it is the pandemic. i mention that in the context of supply chain and labor market. in the war in ukraine we underestimate oil, natural gas, agricultural prices to jump. those two supply shocks conflated because inflation to increase and that's why they were on high alert, devcon one. i would expect a wage, price dynamics to spiral and jacked up interest rates. the two supply shocks that consp
hometown of philly or chicago and that will flow through and we will see housing costs come in inflation back to target. i would be surprised if we are e not back to the federal reserve target by the second half of this year. i think all the trim lines look good despite today's numbers on the market reaction to that we will see how it ends up. but i think we're in pretty good shape there. >> reason number one for optimism and by the way it is inflation that really messed up many...