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grover's loaded for bear on that one. on wall street, look at the markets holding onto some green at least for the dow jones industrialat this ho. the nasdaq's no longer in record territory. could make it this hour ahead of apple's earnings after the bell and, yes, charlie's living it up at beverly kills at the milliken conference. i know. he is filled with scoop from the smart money there, and we're going to get that to you. we're less than an hour to the closing bell, let's start with the "countdown." ♪ ♪ liz: and we have this breaking news. members of the federal reserve are meeting right now debating whether to send signals in tomorrow's statement that a slowing economy could delay any additional rate hikes. or they could do the complete opposite and say, yeah, the gdp number was slightly a blip, it was weak for the first quarter, but their decision tomorrow will be announced, and it could move the markets. right now investors seem to be in a bit of a holding pattern. stocks are straddling the flatline ahead of that a
grover's loaded for bear on that one. on wall street, look at the markets holding onto some green at least for the dow jones industrialat this ho. the nasdaq's no longer in record territory. could make it this hour ahead of apple's earnings after the bell and, yes, charlie's living it up at beverly kills at the milliken conference. i know. he is filled with scoop from the smart money there, and we're going to get that to you. we're less than an hour to the closing bell, let's start with the...
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May 22, 2017
05/17
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BLOOMBERG
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grover norquist.loomberg. ♪ miles, give or take a mile, that kevin cirilli has walked from riyadh to tel aviv, waiting for the president of the united states. mr. netanyahu with a fractious israel. the president will then go 33, maybe 36 miles. somehow the legendary jerusalem traffic will not be a problem as he moves southeast from tel aviv to jerusalem. of course the pageantry in jerusalem. steven saywell with us this morning. it is always fractious with israel politics, isn't it? steven: yes, absolutely. francine and i were talking about this during the break, how does this affect markets -- our view is that the biggest impact is the oil price. whether this increase in the oil price we've had continues. probably the big issue here is the agreement of saudi and russia to these cuts. that is what the markets focused on. how credible can we take that commitment? we think that is really driving this spike higher. for us in markets, we think that is the key point. francine: thank you so much, steven sayw
grover norquist.loomberg. ♪ miles, give or take a mile, that kevin cirilli has walked from riyadh to tel aviv, waiting for the president of the united states. mr. netanyahu with a fractious israel. the president will then go 33, maybe 36 miles. somehow the legendary jerusalem traffic will not be a problem as he moves southeast from tel aviv to jerusalem. of course the pageantry in jerusalem. steven saywell with us this morning. it is always fractious with israel politics, isn't it? steven:...
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May 30, 2017
05/17
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super grover. that's taken i think, grover, but i always use it for you.icans for tax reform, and just hearing your title, and reading the lead story in "the wall street journal," your tiern life, you're the president of an organization that is for tax reform, and it's not working. it's not happening. i'm reading this in the journal. did you read this? let me read it real quick to you, grover. the gop bid to rewrite the tax code falters. the boldest ideas for changing the tax code are either dead or on political life support. the clear winner is the status quo. i mean that's what you wake up to this morning as the president of americans tax reform you want to i mean it's depressing. >> the one thing that isn't going to happen is the status quo continuing. the consensus in the house, the white house is fairly broad. you're going to read six, count them six headlines like that between now and when we radically reform the tax code. there's a consensus to go to 15 or 20, on the corporate rate. there's a consensus that subchapter s. corporations, pass-through c
super grover. that's taken i think, grover, but i always use it for you.icans for tax reform, and just hearing your title, and reading the lead story in "the wall street journal," your tiern life, you're the president of an organization that is for tax reform, and it's not working. it's not happening. i'm reading this in the journal. did you read this? let me read it real quick to you, grover. the gop bid to rewrite the tax code falters. the boldest ideas for changing the tax code are...
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May 1, 2017
05/17
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CSPAN
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cleveland. -- since grover cleveland.hat is a much more chaotic election. brian: who is responsible for naming the house of truth and was it serious? mr. snyder: it is a completely self mocking name for the house. the one who is attributed to the name of the house is holmes. he had a gift for language and could turn of phrase. the person who holmes thought name to the house of truth was a guy named denison. along with frankfurter and valentine, started the house. brian: how hard was this book to write? mr. snyder: it was hard to write because i felt like i was telling four books in one. i was telling all their stories during this period. i tried to make their stories flow and not repeat myself but i still wanted to chronologically proceed with the story and the political and legal developments and the way that change over time occurred from 1912 until 1932. brian: what do you want this book to do? mr. snyder: i want to show people that liberalism did not sprout up with the election of franklin roosevelt in november . bria
cleveland. -- since grover cleveland.hat is a much more chaotic election. brian: who is responsible for naming the house of truth and was it serious? mr. snyder: it is a completely self mocking name for the house. the one who is attributed to the name of the house is holmes. he had a gift for language and could turn of phrase. the person who holmes thought name to the house of truth was a guy named denison. along with frankfurter and valentine, started the house. brian: how hard was this book...
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May 25, 2017
05/17
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FBC
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grover norquist, president of americans for tax reform, joins us now. more or less what everyone sort of thought it was, and it brings back the debate here, the headlines all focused on the 23 million more americans who won't have health care, not the fact that obamacare has been an unmitigated disaster. >> well, it's worse than that. their numbers are nonsense. they might have pointed out that they claimed there would be 24 million americans in the exchanges now, and it's 10. so when you're off by those kind of numbers in predicting obamacare as it's supposed to be growing off by a factor of, you know, 100%, the then tell people that you know what's going to happen is nonsense. they say obamacare's going to have 18 million people in the exchanges next year if nothing happened. it's been going down from 12 to 10. they claim it's going to be 18? so from ridiculous numbers ty say it will fall. they also count the fact that more than 10 million americans are forced to buy obamacare because of mandates, and they wouldn't do it without the mandates. so the i
grover norquist, president of americans for tax reform, joins us now. more or less what everyone sort of thought it was, and it brings back the debate here, the headlines all focused on the 23 million more americans who won't have health care, not the fact that obamacare has been an unmitigated disaster. >> well, it's worse than that. their numbers are nonsense. they might have pointed out that they claimed there would be 24 million americans in the exchanges now, and it's 10. so when...
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May 6, 2017
05/17
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nicaragua to adjudicate a boundary dispute by grover cleveland. his daughter said i want you to ,tart writing them for us meaning his children. so, he decided that would probably be a good idea. he didn't have a lot of time on his hands. he had a small library. he had brief diaries that he had kept during the war. he corresponded with fellow confederate soldiers as he went along and he began to retrace the campaigns of the army of northern virginia. he intended to let no one but his family read that account. that is important. he is not writing this for publication. he does not think anyone will read this except for his children, perhaps their children, and perhaps a very small circle of his closest friends. he still wanted to get things right. as he explained to one of his sisters, i intend not to publish, but only to let my children see these. so, of course, they are very personal, he wrote to his sister . even though they were personal, he said he wanted to get things right. "i have written with my own viewings a critical narrative of the milit
nicaragua to adjudicate a boundary dispute by grover cleveland. his daughter said i want you to ,tart writing them for us meaning his children. so, he decided that would probably be a good idea. he didn't have a lot of time on his hands. he had a small library. he had brief diaries that he had kept during the war. he corresponded with fellow confederate soldiers as he went along and he began to retrace the campaigns of the army of northern virginia. he intended to let no one but his family read...
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May 1, 2017
05/17
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was elected and taft and roosevelt split the republican votes and wilson, the first democrat since grover cleveland to be in the white house. host: all of those folks in the house of truth, how many of them were for woodrow wilson? guest: brandeis was for wilson and people associated with the house were really upset that brandeis was for wilson and didn't like that brandeis was writing articles over pro-wilson ideas. they wanted an outlet for their ideas. and that's how you get the new republic. hat happens is they stop being ritical of t.r. and see t.r. being hypocritical such as the german invasion of belgium. t.r. said one thing and t.r. was criticizing the wilson administration for not taking more forceful action and generally they felt before world war i. d t.r. gets angry at the criticism and calls the editor three international jews. and at that point, their relations are done. before the founding of the magazine. host: why did people want to separate jews from everyone else? guest: phobia. jewish people were occupying high places. there was anti-immigrant sentiment and i think it
was elected and taft and roosevelt split the republican votes and wilson, the first democrat since grover cleveland to be in the white house. host: all of those folks in the house of truth, how many of them were for woodrow wilson? guest: brandeis was for wilson and people associated with the house were really upset that brandeis was for wilson and didn't like that brandeis was writing articles over pro-wilson ideas. they wanted an outlet for their ideas. and that's how you get the new...
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May 6, 2017
05/17
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ask because i'm trying to get, set up an event with grover.i want, i'm the same. [laughing] >> grover, if you are watching -- >> make sure you bring the bathtub. great prop. i just want to say i think a lot of what vanessa is talking about is narrative. i don't think that we have created a narrative about taxation that people can understand and gravitate to. the narrative that we've got now is all topsy-turvy, for three or four years we've been told, the narrative has sunk in, that if we give people at the top the money, that we are all going to benefit at the bottom. the only thing that is trickle down quite frankly is misery. for example, i don't think most people know this, but companies like walmart and mcdonald's actually have seminars to tell the people look, if you can't make it on the salary that we're paying you come here some government programs you can go to. the waltons are worth $40 billion. we're subsidizing their employees. we are subsidizing their wealth with our tax dollars. if that's not insulting and if that doesn't get peop
ask because i'm trying to get, set up an event with grover.i want, i'm the same. [laughing] >> grover, if you are watching -- >> make sure you bring the bathtub. great prop. i just want to say i think a lot of what vanessa is talking about is narrative. i don't think that we have created a narrative about taxation that people can understand and gravitate to. the narrative that we've got now is all topsy-turvy, for three or four years we've been told, the narrative has sunk in, that...
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May 1, 2017
05/17
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and roosevelt split the republican votes, and roosevelt -- and wilson was the first democrat since groverleveland to be in the white house. brian: so all those folks that were in the house of truth, how many of them were for woodrow wilson? mr. snyder: brandeis was for wilson, and the others of the house were upset about that. they didn't like that he was writing articles in "harpers weekly" that they were pro-wilson ideas. that is how you get "the new republic." beingpens is they start r.itical of t they see him as hypocritical on issues such as the german invasion of belgium. wilsoncriticizing the administration for not taking more forceful action after germany invades belgium before world war i. tr gets really angry at the criticism. he is really thin-skinned. thealled the editor to -- i think there was a lot of xenophobia. more and more jews were occupying high places in the government. people like louis brandeis, felix frankfurter. there was a lot of anti-immigrant sentiment at the time, and i think that was part of it. about you spoken a lot that. did you do a book on that? mr. snyd
and roosevelt split the republican votes, and roosevelt -- and wilson was the first democrat since groverleveland to be in the white house. brian: so all those folks that were in the house of truth, how many of them were for woodrow wilson? mr. snyder: brandeis was for wilson, and the others of the house were upset about that. they didn't like that he was writing articles in "harpers weekly" that they were pro-wilson ideas. that is how you get "the new republic." beingpens...
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May 30, 2017
05/17
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norquist on arguing for grover believes in no tax whatsoever. >> none. >> he doesn't want tax on rugshe wants rugs to be just like running, forget tax, tyou know, to nail down rugs. the marx brothers, duck suit. >> that went a little too deep on me for that, sorry. >> it's not all that deep but funny been. >> on grover you're right. >> he's saying something will happen. >> pushed back on "the journal" story that said the boldest ideas are on life support and he says there is consensus on all the things and we'll read the obit on tax reform six more time before it gets done. >> 2025. >> no, something small will get done. if not we'll hold out hope for 2018. it would help some of the valuations. there's a company that you talked about on friday that is probably the strongest retailer in the country, that is alta. i mention it because the tax rate is so high. lot of the retailers need and restaurants pay high taxes. >> they do, they are typically amongst the higher taxpayers. with the border adjustment tax, that's -- well, back to this point, norquist may have his point of view but all o
norquist on arguing for grover believes in no tax whatsoever. >> none. >> he doesn't want tax on rugshe wants rugs to be just like running, forget tax, tyou know, to nail down rugs. the marx brothers, duck suit. >> that went a little too deep on me for that, sorry. >> it's not all that deep but funny been. >> on grover you're right. >> he's saying something will happen. >> pushed back on "the journal" story that said the boldest ideas are on...
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May 1, 2017
05/17
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i would give $1 million to know what grover cleveland thought about this. [laughter] lesley: that's great. [applause] lesley: boy, the competition for good anecdotes is on. [laughter] lesley: i'm going to ask gil to tell us, what makes a successful first lady? what is the measure of that? and then your best anecdote. gil: there is a notion that every first lady is allowed to be whoever she wants to be, and this is kind of passed on first lady after first lady. i argue it is not true. there are whole series of do's and don'ts, invisible tripwires. when you are hillary clinton or nancy reagan, two very different and powerful personalities, and you cross that tripwire, you get pushback. you get demonized, often in the exact same way. hillary clinton was called lady macbeth. nancy reagan was called lady macbeth. it is deeply sexist. every first lady comes in saying, i'm going to redefine this, take it over, feel empowered. they often find they have to be quite traditional. we have seen michelle obama, laura bush, barbara bush understand, if i don't want to gene
i would give $1 million to know what grover cleveland thought about this. [laughter] lesley: that's great. [applause] lesley: boy, the competition for good anecdotes is on. [laughter] lesley: i'm going to ask gil to tell us, what makes a successful first lady? what is the measure of that? and then your best anecdote. gil: there is a notion that every first lady is allowed to be whoever she wants to be, and this is kind of passed on first lady after first lady. i argue it is not true. there are...
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May 5, 2017
05/17
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i mean, if next week he comes out and says grover cleveland was a stern critic of the new deal, on theall be pleased and surprised to know that he knows there was a president grover cleveland. but there comes a point at which this goes -- manages to be ludicrous without being at all funny when you have a president who doesn't understand the basic facts of american history, the basic realities of american governance, and finds it impossible to put into simple declarative sentences what he is talking about. >> i want to listen to a professional diagnosis here. this is from lance dodas, a former professor at harvard medical school, a professor of psychiatry. listen to what he had to say about the president on this show. >> lying in the way this he does it, repeated, dangerous lying makes him unfit, and is a sign of serious mental disturbance. and to the extent he didn't know reality, and i agree, by the way, i don't think he does know reality. clearly he doesn't have a clear grasp of it because he changes. he makes up reality to suit his internal needs. >> george, your column scrupulously
i mean, if next week he comes out and says grover cleveland was a stern critic of the new deal, on theall be pleased and surprised to know that he knows there was a president grover cleveland. but there comes a point at which this goes -- manages to be ludicrous without being at all funny when you have a president who doesn't understand the basic facts of american history, the basic realities of american governance, and finds it impossible to put into simple declarative sentences what he is...
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May 23, 2017
05/17
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KYW
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the event will be held in ocean grover new jersey and starts at 11:00 a.m. >> well, coming up: special day for one of the navy's finest. >> the biggio case being marked today as the battleship new jersey and l special guest speaking at the ceremony. ♪ ♪ at ikea, we believe that you should be able to afford your dream bedroom. that you can get it all for less. that you can find what you're looking for at a price you've been waiting for. and we believe the cost of a good night's sleep shouldn't keep you up at night. save up to 20% at the ikea bedroom event. >> time for check on business news. >> money watch's jill wagner joins us live this morning from the new york stock exchange. >> so sends strong message to one company who violated do not call list, i'm interested. >> yes, do not call means do not call. federal judge in north carolina tripled the award for about 50,000 people who are on a do not call registry, and yet were contacted by dish network anyway. dish could have to pay each person on that registry about 1200 bucks. the judge says she wants to deter dish and other companies f
the event will be held in ocean grover new jersey and starts at 11:00 a.m. >> well, coming up: special day for one of the navy's finest. >> the biggio case being marked today as the battleship new jersey and l special guest speaking at the ceremony. ♪ ♪ at ikea, we believe that you should be able to afford your dream bedroom. that you can get it all for less. that you can find what you're looking for at a price you've been waiting for. and we believe the cost of a good night's...
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May 13, 2017
05/17
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FBC
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american dream house government often kills us as it does it keeps growing and it depresses me bed groverkeeps smiling president for americans for tax reform has fought that tax simplification for 30 years and you have failed. is less simple than it ever was taxes are higher why are you so cheerful? >> the majority of the members of that task -- of the house we have not had a tax increase as long as the republicans controlled the house we stopped the bleeding as long as they can hold up one part of the government. obama what did trillions of higher taxes and republicans said no tax increase period we have to run a half trillion of spending restraint with 23 percent of gdp that is the federal government to stop the bleeding and it takes new leadership. john: politician say we have to get rid of this. >> is the one big victory the american people have against illicit and obamacare. but look to the states to see freedom flourish. home school was illegal and allstate's 30 years ago ted million are now being home school that is breaking into the monopoly. [applause] thirty years ago nowhere di
american dream house government often kills us as it does it keeps growing and it depresses me bed groverkeeps smiling president for americans for tax reform has fought that tax simplification for 30 years and you have failed. is less simple than it ever was taxes are higher why are you so cheerful? >> the majority of the members of that task -- of the house we have not had a tax increase as long as the republicans controlled the house we stopped the bleeding as long as they can hold up...
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May 30, 2017
05/17
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grover. thank you. we appreciate it. break through your allergies.ew flonase sensimist allergy relief instead of allergy pills. it delivers a gentle mist experience to help block six key inflammatory substances. : lock one. new flonase sensimist lock one. changes everything. thithis is the new new york.e? think again. we are building new airports all across the state. new roads and bridges. new mass transit. new business friendly environment. new lower taxes. : learn more at esd.ny.gov at angie's list, we believe there are certain things you n count on, : ♪ [ toilet flushes ] ♪ so when you need a plumber, you can count on us to help you find the right person for the job. discover all the ways we can help at angie's list. because your home is where our heart is. . >> i think -- >> reports there's going to be an overhaul of the communications of fake news. >> now you want to come back to that. the reason the president is frustrated is there is a perpetuation of false narratives, use of unnamed sources over and over again and that is troubling. charles:
grover. thank you. we appreciate it. break through your allergies.ew flonase sensimist allergy relief instead of allergy pills. it delivers a gentle mist experience to help block six key inflammatory substances. : lock one. new flonase sensimist lock one. changes everything. thithis is the new new york.e? think again. we are building new airports all across the state. new roads and bridges. new mass transit. new business friendly environment. new lower taxes. : learn more at esd.ny.gov at...
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grover, we know democrats never met a tax they did not like. but remember in 2008 when presidential candidate barack obama kept promising that he wouldn't raise money on americans earning less than $250,000 a year, an broke that promise. >> we all know said you could keep your doctor, that wasn't true, the premiums would go down, that wasn't true. the lie that he told more than any other was he would never raise any american taxes of any kind if they are less than $250,000 a year. obamacare is 18 or 19 taxes and they took a stethoscope and samed it to the top of it and called it obamacare. it's a trillion in t it's a tax on prescription medicine, on medical devices. when you are getting healthcare were they are taxing hospitals, a texahospitals -- a tax on ins. 8 million people are getting hit by a tax to punish them because they didn't want to buy obamacare. so there are a whole series of tax hikes they put into that that raised the cost of hospitals, of healthcare, health insurance. if you have a flexible savings account. 30 million americans
grover, we know democrats never met a tax they did not like. but remember in 2008 when presidential candidate barack obama kept promising that he wouldn't raise money on americans earning less than $250,000 a year, an broke that promise. >> we all know said you could keep your doctor, that wasn't true, the premiums would go down, that wasn't true. the lie that he told more than any other was he would never raise any american taxes of any kind if they are less than $250,000 a year....
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May 30, 2017
05/17
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we have grover norquist joining us this talk about the tax reform proposals, the plan, where things stande thinks should be happening, and the lines are being drawn when it comes to those things in washington. still watching the markets here. s&p 500, if it's up today, it will be the first time in four years that we've seen eight days in a row of gains for the s&p 500. both the s&p 500 and the nasdaq coming off of new highs once again. we also have robert kaplan, tall also a fed president. he's a voting member of the fomc, he will join us with steve liesman at 7:10 to kick around what he thinks is happening with the economy and the possibilities for other potential rate hikes. june is the month that they are expected to hike again. plus the airlines have been front and center for some time when it onlies to customer service, what they think about things. this morning we have michael o'leary, the head of ryanair. we'll see what he thinks about how the airlines have been treating customers. this morning, the winner of the indianapolis 500, takumo sato will join us. he's ringing the opening
we have grover norquist joining us this talk about the tax reform proposals, the plan, where things stande thinks should be happening, and the lines are being drawn when it comes to those things in washington. still watching the markets here. s&p 500, if it's up today, it will be the first time in four years that we've seen eight days in a row of gains for the s&p 500. both the s&p 500 and the nasdaq coming off of new highs once again. we also have robert kaplan, tall also a fed...
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May 17, 2017
05/17
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and metro is taking a stab at retail sales using an old metro car to create a pop up store at the grover shopping concept could eventually make a stop at a metro station near you. >> we begin first at 5:00 tonight with dramatic new cell phone video in a deadly shooting involving d.c. police officers this happened after investigators say a woman refused to drop a gun. tonight we're learning new details in this shooting that happened about 7:00 last night outside a rec center in southwest d.c. witnesses tell us at the time there were a number of children who were playing in that area. pat collins is gathering new information for us on this scene. >> reporter: i have to begin with the warning. we do have cell phone video of this police involved shooting, some people might find it disturbing. it all came to an end at the front door of this rec center, take a look at the bullet holes. their low on the door, the reason for that, the woman at the time was kneeling down. she was kneeling down but she had a serious gun in her hand. this is a semi-automatic pistol police say the woman had at the b
and metro is taking a stab at retail sales using an old metro car to create a pop up store at the grover shopping concept could eventually make a stop at a metro station near you. >> we begin first at 5:00 tonight with dramatic new cell phone video in a deadly shooting involving d.c. police officers this happened after investigators say a woman refused to drop a gun. tonight we're learning new details in this shooting that happened about 7:00 last night outside a rec center in southwest...
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May 17, 2017
05/17
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transportation reporter adam tuss is live at the grover station where this is all going down.hey. >> reporter: check it out. we're not in an old metrorail car. this is a juice bar right now. this is what's happened here pop-up kiosks and and we've got all types of retail going on. take a look over here for all types of new things to buy and see and you'll find this for the next several weeks. you have never seen this before at a metro station. sliced up, broken apart, this old rail car now home to pop up retail shops here at the grove ner straj more station. juices and jewelry, flowers, food, all coming from local shops who are taking over these spaces as part of a pilot program. >> i bought cheese buns. they're over in kensington market on saturdays and so they're very he delicious. >> three, two, one, cut. >> reporter: a celebration kicking off the event today. robert mojo is the artist and sculpture who literally cut apart and created these spaces. >> once they said they want seven eos b subway car, you got it. >> reporter: he says it was tough work but worth it. >> i loved
transportation reporter adam tuss is live at the grover station where this is all going down.hey. >> reporter: check it out. we're not in an old metrorail car. this is a juice bar right now. this is what's happened here pop-up kiosks and and we've got all types of retail going on. take a look over here for all types of new things to buy and see and you'll find this for the next several weeks. you have never seen this before at a metro station. sliced up, broken apart, this old rail car...
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and the truth is as atr, grover norquist has said, the tax is -- more money could be raised in other ways. in some ways, the gas tax is a kind of way to avoid making tough choices. you have to decide how much money or how much people should be taxed and have to decide on agenda from within the revenues that you have. you don't say hey, let's raise the gas tax. >> you think how costs are going up for everything. wages, wages haven't budged in 20 years and yet the cost energy, the cost of housing, the cost of food, all these things keep going up. the average american would be unfairly penalized in this. but to be clear, donald trump didn't say he wanted to do this, just that he was open to hearing a proposal, as he's to open hearing a proposal on anything. >> absolutely. the truth is this president has said on many things to people surprised he's wling to consider all sorts of things, his suggestion he might talk to the north korean leader was one of the examples. he's trying to suggest he's open-minded about trying to fix things. trish: you're open-minded until you make the decision,
and the truth is as atr, grover norquist has said, the tax is -- more money could be raised in other ways. in some ways, the gas tax is a kind of way to avoid making tough choices. you have to decide how much money or how much people should be taxed and have to decide on agenda from within the revenues that you have. you don't say hey, let's raise the gas tax. >> you think how costs are going up for everything. wages, wages haven't budged in 20 years and yet the cost energy, the cost of...
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May 6, 2017
05/17
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grover cleveland said a public office is a public trust. we have to think about to what extent do we allow public trust? we have anti-trust and public market sector market places and some should motivate us on the supply side. especially because public employees get two bites of the apple, not only collectively bargain, but there's an electoral link that can influence and make the agents the principals as opposed to the agents. and what sarah and her political talk how money starts flowing in the reverse direction you'd expect it to. institutional rules matter, whether it's proportional democracy versus representative, and proportional democracies, governments spend more, debts are higher, per gdp and they lock in interest groups more easily. there are less checks and balances than these democracies than presidential. you get higher spending looking across time and across nations. the further look for checks and balances, whether it's switzerland with the double majority spending break rule that dramatically decreased the government spendin
grover cleveland said a public office is a public trust. we have to think about to what extent do we allow public trust? we have anti-trust and public market sector market places and some should motivate us on the supply side. especially because public employees get two bites of the apple, not only collectively bargain, but there's an electoral link that can influence and make the agents the principals as opposed to the agents. and what sarah and her political talk how money starts flowing in...
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May 31, 2017
05/17
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this is going back to grover cleveland. and not the modern state-of-the-art grover cleveland of his second term after the benjamin harrison term. this was his first term, during which this regulatory authority was given to the interstate commerce commission, the first economic regulatory administrative agency in the u.s. and it is a fact that the fcc title ii regulation is a direct descendent of that form of regulation, that the interstate commerce act and interstate commerce commission has been the model for all of the economic regulatory agencies at the federal level in our history. the civil aviation authority which became the civil aeronautics board, the u.s. shipping commission which became the federal maritime commission, the federal power commission which became the federal energy regulatory commission, and the fcc which actually, if you draw the line back from title ii regulation you ultimately get back to i believe it was the interstate commerce commission itself which was the original repository of the first regul
this is going back to grover cleveland. and not the modern state-of-the-art grover cleveland of his second term after the benjamin harrison term. this was his first term, during which this regulatory authority was given to the interstate commerce commission, the first economic regulatory administrative agency in the u.s. and it is a fact that the fcc title ii regulation is a direct descendent of that form of regulation, that the interstate commerce act and interstate commerce commission has...
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May 24, 2017
05/17
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is that too optimistic in terms of when to expect growth, grover? not if we get what ryan and president trump are talking about. you take corporate rate to 35 to 15, they have been projecting less than 2%. eight years of what obama gave you. at the end to have carter year, limits to growth. there's no more growth anymore. reagan cut taxes we got 4% growth. i think 3% growth understates what this economy can do if we continue the deregulation and let peopave permits to build everything from pipelines to power plants rather than have a war on infrastructure as obama did for eight years but rather get out of the way of infrastructure being built so it can be built and lower tax rates. i think 4% is completely reasonable, they're sticking in three, i don't know maybe not be criticized to the left, they'll be criticized fbi left. maria: they are being criticized by the left. dagen: nonpartisan economists look at the 3% growth rate based on growth and working age population which is is barely growing at this point that without that wellspring of workers t
is that too optimistic in terms of when to expect growth, grover? not if we get what ryan and president trump are talking about. you take corporate rate to 35 to 15, they have been projecting less than 2%. eight years of what obama gave you. at the end to have carter year, limits to growth. there's no more growth anymore. reagan cut taxes we got 4% growth. i think 3% growth understates what this economy can do if we continue the deregulation and let peopave permits to build everything from...
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May 1, 2017
05/17
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CNBC
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if you talk to grover norquist, if you take the bat off the table, there's no revenue there and you don'treform he thinks you're talking about a 28% rate which is basically what obama was proposing. and frankly, i think we can all agree 28% is not necessarily going to make you competitive, if that's the goal, relative to the rest of the world. >> well, i think you pointed out there's a real tough tradeoff here. the more you lower the rate, you have two problem. one is you have to get rid of credits and deductions and exclusions. some of which have focused very much on incoming domestic investment. and unless you're willing to give those up, it's hard to lower the rate. if you refuse to raise individual rates it gets even harder. so i don't think we're going to get a dramatic cut in the court tax rate. i think we'll get a small cut. i think the problem with the border adjust tax is it's not a dumb idea. it's very complicated. the system isn't ready for it. so it will come back in some form. for now, i think they're going to settle for a modest tax cut. income some commission to study more
if you talk to grover norquist, if you take the bat off the table, there's no revenue there and you don'treform he thinks you're talking about a 28% rate which is basically what obama was proposing. and frankly, i think we can all agree 28% is not necessarily going to make you competitive, if that's the goal, relative to the rest of the world. >> well, i think you pointed out there's a real tough tradeoff here. the more you lower the rate, you have two problem. one is you have to get rid...
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we begin with the jobs report, americans for tax reform, grover norquist, 211,000, do you see the number feels like the job market is gaining momentum. >> it is progress but remember in the year when reagan's tax cut took effect in january 1983, we created 4 million jobs. almost 400,000 jobs a month. we can get that 211,000 number up higher with tax reform. this is a good start with deregulation. charles: one month where we had 1 million jobs created in a single month, mind-boggling stuff with a smaller population. i had gary cohen on the show and he is pretty firm about the fact that donald trump is going to try to get us a 15% rate, what are your thoughts? >> extremely helpful. the highest in the world, i was just in australia, they are at 30%, second stupidest and there, and from their treasury office, if you go to 15 the rest of the world will follow. a worldwide period of growth as other countries move towards hour 15 which will put us above ireland and the european average. charles: some conservatives out there who think this could be too much. what happens with debt? the cbo will
we begin with the jobs report, americans for tax reform, grover norquist, 211,000, do you see the number feels like the job market is gaining momentum. >> it is progress but remember in the year when reagan's tax cut took effect in january 1983, we created 4 million jobs. almost 400,000 jobs a month. we can get that 211,000 number up higher with tax reform. this is a good start with deregulation. charles: one month where we had 1 million jobs created in a single month, mind-boggling stuff...