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Apr 20, 2024
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you can look at texas and other places. my home state of colorado is proving that transitioning to cleaner forms of energy, does not mean that you have to compromise unreliability. colorado has been moving quickly in the direction of renewable energy. one of these utilities has received approval, to look at the new network, connecting with these resources. this is from 2040. they are looking at the existing transitions. all of the new wind, energy, and solar powers created. states like colorado, are transitioning to a reliable, cleaner energy sources. i know the two things that are conjoined. all of you folks sitting here today, their massive response ability. a lot is being asked of you. a lot is expected of you. i want to thank you in advance for everything you are doing. i'm confident, giving the continual investments of these federal actions. we have the needs of the american people. we can all work together to have a smooth transition to cleaner energy. this does not sacrifice reliability. >> and trying to recognize th
you can look at texas and other places. my home state of colorado is proving that transitioning to cleaner forms of energy, does not mean that you have to compromise unreliability. colorado has been moving quickly in the direction of renewable energy. one of these utilities has received approval, to look at the new network, connecting with these resources. this is from 2040. they are looking at the existing transitions. all of the new wind, energy, and solar powers created. states like...
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Apr 22, 2024
04/24
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if i'm if i'm an enslaved person in texas, canada is a of a distance to try and reach. so the movement is towards mexico. once mexico abolishes slavery. so that, i think, is the way to look at the equation. once wherever you have free soil, people will go towards it. no. is there a magic here? you? yeah, but i think your recording you have to be the only one motivated someone someone. territory. can i characterize? not in mixed company. i shouldn't shouldn't. there was money to be made. the people to slave catchers who turned up in boston. looking for william and allen. craft one worked with william in a carpenter shop so he knew him and therefore you could identify him. and the second one was hired by the slave catchers because he had a reputation for doing that sort of thing. so there's to be made in and the money was significant enough that it warranted doing this. the slave the slave holders on the hand after 1850 would were guaranteed the cost. the cost of returning the fugitive would be covered by the government. yeah. so if you look at the bills, the bills of ret
if i'm if i'm an enslaved person in texas, canada is a of a distance to try and reach. so the movement is towards mexico. once mexico abolishes slavery. so that, i think, is the way to look at the equation. once wherever you have free soil, people will go towards it. no. is there a magic here? you? yeah, but i think your recording you have to be the only one motivated someone someone. territory. can i characterize? not in mixed company. i shouldn't shouldn't. there was money to be made. the...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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you're seeing a little bit this particularly down in texas in a little bit in arizona. you know, will the democrats really risk with our current border are they going to send federal troops down to texas and say we're going to start arresting? and i knew michael was going to say, yes of arresting people who are just trying to enforce the federal laws that they won't enforce. i think they may try. but i think if we're smart, we can make the optics of that so bad that becomes toxic even for the democrats. so that's that short term, create facts on the ground. what do we do? the long conceptually? well, first, i think we have to puncture the nation of immigrants myth that's literally its origins in a democrat campaign in 1960. if you read my chapter in the book i kind of go all into sort of the history of american immigration, which is not what most people think it is. so you can see some of my other talks on youtube. we also need to have a candid look at what worked and what didn't work under trump, under trump deportations increased. the border was certainly more secure.
you're seeing a little bit this particularly down in texas in a little bit in arizona. you know, will the democrats really risk with our current border are they going to send federal troops down to texas and say we're going to start arresting? and i knew michael was going to say, yes of arresting people who are just trying to enforce the federal laws that they won't enforce. i think they may try. but i think if we're smart, we can make the optics of that so bad that becomes toxic even for the...
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Apr 27, 2024
04/24
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host: we will go down to houston, texas. tom is a republican there. good morning, tom. caller: good morning. good morning. thanks for taking my call. i have been a republican, i am 85 years old, been a republican a long time. i am leaning towards voting for president biden and vice president harris. look, this guy that you are interviewing now, yes -- host: yes, we are listening. you said about this book? caller: i have seen -- host: tom, i am sorry, you are breaking up. we can't hear you. we will go to ohio. gus, independent. caller: i would like to ask charlie here, when he did those polls on kamala harris, do you ask their party affiliation or do you try to poll 50/50? because that's number one. number two is why don't you write a book about marjorie taylor greene? that would be an interesting book, you know? thank you. guest: that's a good idea. maybe i will call her office and see if we can get started. but as far as polling goes, i think most pollsters try to get a representative slice of the country, half democrat, half republican and try to weigh it in a way tha
host: we will go down to houston, texas. tom is a republican there. good morning, tom. caller: good morning. good morning. thanks for taking my call. i have been a republican, i am 85 years old, been a republican a long time. i am leaning towards voting for president biden and vice president harris. look, this guy that you are interviewing now, yes -- host: yes, we are listening. you said about this book? caller: i have seen -- host: tom, i am sorry, you are breaking up. we can't hear you. we...
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Apr 20, 2024
04/24
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market is so wacko so supply constraint and people are moving from northeast down into florida and texas so it's very difficult to disentangle i would expect this will have an impact on price. and on the commercial side it's built into our forecast, yes. so far it's very difficult to tease out. [inaudible] looks large swaths of america? works states are stepping in or people are self-insuring big commercials are saying is going to cost me $500,000 for some purpose complex. for five and the thousand dollars i can replace the entire roof so i'm just not going to do it. were seeing a lot more self-insurance. which, by the way it may mean more onus on government to step in. if you look at natural disasters in the last 50 years and you look at property damage and compare it to insurance plus government support it's almost one-for-one. so those place have less insurance get more government support. that took a lot of time, you were very attentive and i strive to be 51% right anyway thank you very much, thank you. [applause] [inaudible conversations]
market is so wacko so supply constraint and people are moving from northeast down into florida and texas so it's very difficult to disentangle i would expect this will have an impact on price. and on the commercial side it's built into our forecast, yes. so far it's very difficult to tease out. [inaudible] looks large swaths of america? works states are stepping in or people are self-insuring big commercials are saying is going to cost me $500,000 for some purpose complex. for five and the...
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Apr 26, 2024
04/24
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places in states like florida a huge surge of latino support for donald trump in places like south texas, particularly the nonwhite vote moved very strongly in its direction. so you really have, i think, a political and political dynamic where i divide the electorate into three groups. and, you know, i you have white voters with college degrees who have been trending left. they're about 30% of the electorate. they're going to stay about 30% of the electorate for the foreseeable. you have white working class voters who are 40 to 45% of the electorate and their numbers have been shrinking, but they still the largest group and they are majority in those midwestern battleground states. and then you have nonwhite voters and a my argument is nonwhite voters really are the battleground. and i think that their political preferences are not settled, that there is sort of been this you know, they are growing as a share of the electorate. but you've seen in 2020 and it looks like in the 2024 polls, trump into those margins and i think the point i really want to drive home is, you know, we really ne
places in states like florida a huge surge of latino support for donald trump in places like south texas, particularly the nonwhite vote moved very strongly in its direction. so you really have, i think, a political and political dynamic where i divide the electorate into three groups. and, you know, i you have white voters with college degrees who have been trending left. they're about 30% of the electorate. they're going to stay about 30% of the electorate for the foreseeable. you have white...
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Apr 22, 2024
04/24
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if you in texas or california, you're very familiar issues with the electricity grid. these are, you know, broadband internet, for example, you know, isn't in rural areas in a in large parts of this country. so there are lots of problems in all these sectors, too. and i think part of that story is a question of public policy choices. and we can solve some of those problems if think about making different choices as as policymakers it does. me that there are you know, in some ways businesses that are essential to other businesses and tend, as you said, towards concentration or monopoly. why don't we take one last question and i'm going to have got a faculty meeting about this gentleman in the front to see so much, to talk. i have two quick questions. so, one, my first questions that do you have a one question, if you don't mind? okay. so the current problem with iran does true. do you think it has something more than the iranian trade? so so the monopoly of the airline industry in this country is also due to the absence of a high speed railway network. and we don't have
if you in texas or california, you're very familiar issues with the electricity grid. these are, you know, broadband internet, for example, you know, isn't in rural areas in a in large parts of this country. so there are lots of problems in all these sectors, too. and i think part of that story is a question of public policy choices. and we can solve some of those problems if think about making different choices as as policymakers it does. me that there are you know, in some ways businesses...
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Apr 27, 2024
04/24
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it's in texas. well we're taking care of that a little bit. but. but but the point being is that these ideas proliferate it and propagate it through the institutions. the real question is how? that's the question i sought to answer in the book. that's driving question that i think is important when you see, your opponent, your enemy in a certain language, successful in the same game that you're playing. the worst answer is to say, well, there, they're there, they're bad, they're stupid. don't know what they're doing. it doesn't work. the better question is to ask, well, did they do it? and what you learn from it? and then how you adjust your own politics to respond. and so if you read the book, there are two. i tried to put two layers into it. some people caught. i was like really excited about that. but the explicit is this history. but the embedded text is a process of learning and teaching assimilating. ideas, tactics, strategies. because we're fighting in a different environment. if you watch a movie like mr. smith to washington, anyone know th
it's in texas. well we're taking care of that a little bit. but. but but the point being is that these ideas proliferate it and propagate it through the institutions. the real question is how? that's the question i sought to answer in the book. that's driving question that i think is important when you see, your opponent, your enemy in a certain language, successful in the same game that you're playing. the worst answer is to say, well, there, they're there, they're bad, they're stupid. don't...
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Apr 20, 2024
04/24
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yeah, but 40 years ago in fort worth, texas was a group who started buying pawnshop shops. and i said, a banker, why are you investing this is that it gives us we are allowed to charge 20% a month. i said that's legal. he said absolutely legal. and later on they i mean, they made millions public soon, but why why isn't the bank doing this they say it's not in our charter or because people don't have collateral and credit. say, hang on a second. okay so they didn't that same group started all your cargo is loaning money against cars to the who the banks would not give credit to. they went public for billions. so what is it about banks? they see this profit here. they still don't go after well. i think the first part of your story is more accurate that is, if you look at pawnshops and day lenders and so forth they charge these enormous fees and enormous interest rates. a number of them are financed in the background by some of these big banks they're not the the big banks are to get some of the profits of the share of the profit here without getting the bad publicity. and so
yeah, but 40 years ago in fort worth, texas was a group who started buying pawnshop shops. and i said, a banker, why are you investing this is that it gives us we are allowed to charge 20% a month. i said that's legal. he said absolutely legal. and later on they i mean, they made millions public soon, but why why isn't the bank doing this they say it's not in our charter or because people don't have collateral and credit. say, hang on a second. okay so they didn't that same group started all...
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Apr 22, 2024
04/24
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but then, you know, university of austin, this new fledgling university in texas, they approached me. so i have an affiliation there. you know, my i got this i was approached by substack to move my my writing my newsletter to their platform and that's been paying the bills and you know so we'll see i but as far as an academic job goes i'm still unimpressed with the legacy institutions of i'm back right here. you have the scribe the concept of luxury beliefs as impose costs upon the lower classes in exchange for societal social to the upper classes. but it increasingly seems like with some things like transgenderism, for instance, the upper classes are, you know, very to have that done to their kids as well, that these things are not just things where, you know, they're expressing support for them, but not actually practicing them. how do you think that how does that alter your view of luxury beliefs? well, so the transgender kids. well, so so generally good luxury beliefs they can inflict costs on the upper classes but the the price is lower. they are in a better position to withstand
but then, you know, university of austin, this new fledgling university in texas, they approached me. so i have an affiliation there. you know, my i got this i was approached by substack to move my my writing my newsletter to their platform and that's been paying the bills and you know so we'll see i but as far as an academic job goes i'm still unimpressed with the legacy institutions of i'm back right here. you have the scribe the concept of luxury beliefs as impose costs upon the lower...
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Apr 23, 2024
04/24
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but then, you know, university of austin, this new fledgling university in texas, they approached me. so i have an affiliation there. you know, my i got this i was approached by substack to move my my writing my newsletter to their platform and that's been paying the bills and you know so we'll see i but as far as an academic job goes i'm still unimpressed with the legacy institutions of i'm back right here. you have the scribe the concept of luxury beliefs as impose costs upon the lower classes in exchange for societal social to the upper classes. but it increasingly seems like with some things like transgenderism, for instance, the upper classes are, you know, very to have that done to their kids as well, that these things are not just things where, you know, they're expressing support for them, but not actually practicing them. how do you think that how does that alter your view of luxury beliefs? well, so the transgender kids. well, so so generally good luxury beliefs they can inflict costs on the upper classes but the the price is lower. they are in a better position to withstand
but then, you know, university of austin, this new fledgling university in texas, they approached me. so i have an affiliation there. you know, my i got this i was approached by substack to move my my writing my newsletter to their platform and that's been paying the bills and you know so we'll see i but as far as an academic job goes i'm still unimpressed with the legacy institutions of i'm back right here. you have the scribe the concept of luxury beliefs as impose costs upon the lower...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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and texas he was jogging in iowa. jogging in new hampshire. he was jogging all the time for the better for the media. you know. and then he went to a gym in concord and did lifts did weight lifts and said, let me see ronald reagan do that, you know, that type of stuff and that really, really, really that was a and i understand why it was a burn to mrs. reagan saddle so he picked bush because he was out of at the convention they tried the co-presidency with gerald ford that, you know, it worked for about 8 hours and then it fell apart. right. it was just you know, it was nonsense, really. you know, jim baker later, he said he says if they been elected, would you call ford mr. president, mr. vice president, be mr. vice president. mr. president. so fell apart and reagan was out of options. jack kemp was too young. the one option i wish he'd thought of. i wish he thought it was to go back to a 76 choice. the schweiker really, really good man senator from pennsylvania. and he dramatically when he was reagan's running mate in 76, he was he a moderat
and texas he was jogging in iowa. jogging in new hampshire. he was jogging all the time for the better for the media. you know. and then he went to a gym in concord and did lifts did weight lifts and said, let me see ronald reagan do that, you know, that type of stuff and that really, really, really that was a and i understand why it was a burn to mrs. reagan saddle so he picked bush because he was out of at the convention they tried the co-presidency with gerald ford that, you know, it worked...