17 Burst results for "Mark Hannah"

Big Time Baseball
"mark hannah" Discussed on Big Time Baseball
"Dot com for details. Well, they can throw that one bone that you mentioned because I did see a game where Mark Hannah was chasing a ball into the corner of foul ball through it back into the stands. It rolled onto the field. Then he made a big play and he's running to get to the bed and he's helping his puffing. Okay, and that one circumstance the umpire can use some judgment. Other than that, absolutely not. I mean, I come from obviously my own standpoint is I need to make my deadlines. This is great for the deadlines. I am sorry I have to be selfish about it. I also think it's great for the fans. I don't think we're trimming the fat out of the game. So I don't think the fans will mind if two and a half hour game instead of a three hour or if it's a Red Sox Yankee game of four hour game. I think it's more action, better for the fans, better for me. I did hear a couple other writers. I won't name them or taking up the cause of the players. They hear the complaints. I mean, I'm sorry. They're able to do it in the minor leagues. It's better for the game. It's better for all of us. If we keep the 15 seconds, do not tweak it. This is a home run for Major League Baseball. This is the WBC was. If you want to make that one exception where a guy's made a great play at the end of the last half inning and at the run in and quickly go to bed, give them an extra few seconds. That's fine. That won't affect anything except be a little more fair, but let's not change what is great. It doesn't make any sense to me. Quickly, John, do you expect the popularity of the WBC to have any impact on attendance or TV ratings for Major League Baseball this season? You know, it might a little bit. I think so. You know, people got excited about this. And the finish was perfect. I mean, it was like scripted and I think it certainly drew a lot of attention. I mean, the Italy, Japan game, got 48 million viewers. That's incredible a quarterfinal game that's a, you know, perceived to be going to be a route, Italy versus Japan. This game had better timing. I think we would have said a record. They would have set a record and I think it's baseballs off to a great start. I mean, right now, you know, for all the criticism that he gets, rob Manfred can, you know, be pretty excited about the way things are going and Major League Baseball. John will let you go just on the way out, so the obviously, you know, we heard that tani is the great unicorn and he'll make a ton of money, but the mighty Casey, in this case, Mike Trout struck out. There's no joy in mudville. How? How will these guys be perceived moving forward? Does that hurt in any way trout status as Mickey Mantle and is Babe Ruth gonna make even more money once he fits? The record for free agents 360 million by judge. This guy is certainly going to, I think 500 million is the baseline right now for ohtani, it's going to be incredible to see yeah, I don't think one strikeout against the guy throwing a hundred with a slider should be really counted against my crowd. If you look at the numbers, they are Mickey Mantle like other than the fact he hasn't been in World Series mantle one I think 7 World Series right near 18 home runs in the World Series. Look at the regular season numbers, the speed the fact that the center Fielder, you know, I guess mental switch hitter, but they're fairly comparable on the stats. So, you know, I don't think one strikeout is going to do any harm to drought in ohtani at this moment is the king of baseball. I don't think there's any question about that. And he will be the king of free agency. Great stuff, John, great catching up with you really looking forward to getting to the real stuff. Thanks, John.

WTOP
"mark hannah" Discussed on WTOP
"Tom foti and Washington following shooting incidents at knocked out power to an North Carolina county for days, CBS is Nicole scang and now reports. An individual opened fire at a Duke Energy facility in ridgeway, South Carolina, Wednesday, according to multiple sources, the individual pulled up in a truck before opening fire using what appeared to be a long gun. Several Duke Energy employees witnessed the event no one was injured. The shooting comes just days after a widespread power outage in more county, North Carolina prompted by a deliberate attack in which gunfire damaged two substations. The energy now reports power has been restored there in North Carolina. In Moscow, Idaho police are looking for a specific car in their investigation of that quadruple murder of students at the university of Idaho. It's a white 2011 to 2013 Hyundai elantra, police say the license plate is not known right now, but still this is a significant step in the investigation. As investigators have yet to release any information about a suspect or suspects and this is potentially the first significant piece of evidence they've released publicly so far in their effort to solve this case. K REM TV reporter Mark Hannah Rohan, more government document smart classified have been found in Florida. A U.S. official confirms to CBS News representatives of former president Donald Trump alerted the FBI, they've recovered yet another set of potentially sensitive documents. This time in a storage facility in West Palm Beach, that is correspondent Scott McFarland, some driving news from triple-A this morning. It's average price for a gallon of regular gas is now three 33, that's about a

WTOP
"mark hannah" Discussed on WTOP
"Energy employees witnessed the event no one was injured. The shooting comes just days after a widespread power outage in more county, North Carolina prompted by a deliberate attack in which gunfire damaged two substations. And Duke Energy now reports power restored there in North Carolina. In Moscow Idaho, you start looking for a specific car in their investigation of that quadruple murder of students at the university of Idaho. It's a white 2011 to 2013 Hyundai elantra, police say the license plate is not known right now, but still this is a significant step in the investigation. As investigators have yet to release any information about a suspect or suspects and this is potentially the first significant piece of evidence they've released publicly so far in their effort to solve this case. I'm TV's Mark Hannah Hannah more government documents more classified have been found in Florida. A U.S. official confirms to CBS News representatives of former president Donald Trump alerted the FBI, they recovered yet another set of potentially sensitive documents. This time in a storage facility in West Palm Beach. CBS News correspondent Scott mcfarlane overseas in the Mideast Palestinian officials tell a French news agency, Israeli forces have killed three Palestinians in the flashpoint city of Janine in the West Bank. Now to the Midwest, where the state of Iowa was offering $6 million in grants to get more truckers on the road. Not a shama. Businesses can apply for grant money to reimburse the cost of in-house training or employee tuition at a third party training program. The Iowa motor truck association says the grant is a step in the

The Argument
"mark hannah" Discussed on The Argument
"Tim, Mika, thank you so much for joining me. Hey, Jane. Pleasure to be here. So before we get into your disagreement about whether grassroots fundraising is to blame for the noxious state of American politics or at least the noxious state of the inbox I never check. I want to get some perspective. Sure. Like, Dwight D. Eisenhower wasn't saying like, if you just send me ten more dollars, we can fend off communism. You know, FDR was not like, if you give me ten cents, I'll finally beat Herbert Hoover. Jimmy what a nickel. Right. Yeah, so what was the before time like? What did it used to be like? Well, I think it depends how far back you want to go. Probably not Herbert Hoover. I mean, the first big money campaign was the 1890s actually and Mark Hannah, who was a Republican fundraiser, famously said there are two things that are important in politics. One is money and I forget what the second one is. But he was raising money from fat cats. He was raising money from monopolists and, you know, railroad barons and so on. In the 50s and 60s, what you have is the beginnings of mass campaigning with things like television, the first televised debate being 1960 between Kennedy and Nixon. And the first, I would say, appearance of mass fundraising is direct mail. So, you know, by the 1970s, you're not being deluged by email, you're being deluged by paper mail. George McGovern famously financed his campaign in 1972 by writing a very long and heartfelt 7 page letter that went out to hundreds of thousands of Democrats. I love that. I love a letter, being like, please give me money. Right. How many tiktoks if we took the pages and made it into a series of tiktoks? I wonder how many that would be. I bet mcgovern would be good on TikTok if he were still around. It isn't all that different that we have had a kind of mass fundraising on both sides that press donors, hot buttons, but it really didn't take off until 2004, primarily because in those early years of the web, people were getting used to the idea of just using their credit card to buy things online. So it's really eBay and Amazon that get a lot of people accustomed to this notion that if I put my credit card here, I'm not going to suddenly get ripped off. It's okay to buy something this way and then it becomes okay to donate that way. And the number of people who donate to presidential campaigns between 2002 1004 went up by about tenfold. Tim, you worked on a bunch of conservative campaigns and strategies. And you have declared once and for all that it is time to stop worshiping the grassroots dollar. What is so awful that grassroots campaign fundraising? When do you think that grassroots donations went wrong? Mostly, I guess I would point to the unintended consequences of my love, John McCain's campaign finance Bill, with Russ feingold, would be probably the place that we start going the wrong direction. That was the 2002 bill that banned unlimited unregulated contributions from corporations unions and individuals to political parties. Yes. I think that there were some nice sentiments about wanting to get corruption out of the system, limit the amount of money that bigger donors can give to candidates, but in doing so, campaigns weren't going to decide to start spending less money. So they had to come up with other means in which to raise money. And it created a couple of scourges one. It just made fundraising like the central activity for most politicians. And a lot of their time is spent around fundraising. I think that there are some pernicious side effects to that. But then also created some negative incentives. I think one of them that I get into in the article is that what we saw very quickly beginning with Joe Wilson when he shouted you lie at Barack Obama during a joint address to Congress and then realized that he could raise a ton of money within 12 days. He raised more money, sending out appeals to all the conservative lists he could buy than he'd raised in his entire campaign before that. Very quickly then there were a lot of imitators who realized that all of a sudden they could raise big lumps of cash by being obnoxious and shouting things about the people they hate. And I think that as a result of the decreased power, maybe the well intentioned decreased power of bigger givers, politicians were then incentivized to do everything they could to get small dollar money and usually not entirely. That has tended to be saying things that are inflammatory, doing things that are going to get people to retweet you and post you on Facebook, spreading conspiracies, spreading mistruths. And so it has created a just a different type of grift in a different type of corruption rather than the old company X gives you 20 grand in the hopes that you kill amendment Y it sounds like what you're saying we've got two well, okay, we have a bunch of problems. Two big buckets of problem. One is that now politicians need to spend much of their time fundraising and thinking about fundraising, which means they spend less time doing whatever it is they're actually supposed to be doing. And secondly, all of that fundraising is going towards candidates who can get a lot of money by being incredibly annoying. That's how you get Marjorie Taylor Greene, who actually is a massive fundraising bonanza because she says insane things. Then sends an email about how the left wants to cancel her. But Mika, you responded to Tim this argument here and called it taking a flamethrower to the entire landscape of online fundraising. So what's your problem with the case that Tim makes? Well, I have a number of problems. I don't disagree that we absolutely thought in the early days of the Internet that the ease of donating money online would democratize the system and then we'd finally get a politician who could tell the American people the truth about corporate power and I would argue that actually on the left that is what small donor fundraising that Tim is worried about has actually enabled. If you look to see who is raising the largest percentage of their money in small donations, meaning the amounts under $200, it's people like Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Katie Porter, I don't think any of these people are the same kind of toxic racist populists that Tim is correctly worrying about on the right who are absolutely Tapping into this beast and feeding it at the same time with the most outrageous provocative attention getting things that they can do. But I don't want to throw the baby out with the bath water. Isn't part of that argument that it's good when AOC or Katie Porter do it and it's bad when Marjorie Taylor Greene does it. Is the heart of your disagreement is the tradeoff worth it. Sending $5 to Marjorie Taylor Greene and sending $5 to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or both small donations. Yes. It's just who are you donating

History That Doesn't Suck
"mark hannah" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck
"A few minutes before 7 30 p.m.. A 46 year old man with close cropped hair, all of skin, and dressed in a smart black suit, is riding in a carriage through the streets of Washington D.C. to The White House. Is it a tad anxious? Not that this is his first visit. No, no. In the month since William McKinley was assassinated and Theodore Roosevelt took office, the new president has already made it clear to this educator, southerner, and most influential black Americans that his council is very much desired. TR's already had him over. But this is different. Tonight, this gentleman a mister Booker T. Washington is going to The White House as the U.S. president's invited dinner guest. Turning up 1600 Pennsylvania circular drive, the carriage comes to a stop. Under The White House's iconic hillard port cochere. What thoughts must be going through Booker's mind? A natural diplomat, he frequently declined social invitations from why associates to avoid a possible misstep in this fraught. Segregated era of Jim Crow. But one does not say no to the president of the United States. So, the tuskegee institute principle acts like the honored presidential guest that he is. Thinking his colleague whitfield McKinley for the ride, Booker then ascends The White House steps and walks past the black door keepers as he enters the executive mansion through its glass paneled entrance. The roosevelts might be a blue blooded American family, but there's nothing stuffy about this dinner table. Take first lady, Edith Roosevelt. Per usual, Edith easily carries the conversation, even as she sits between and keeps an eye on her two young troublemakers. 7 year old Archie and almost four year old Quentin. I wonder which small creatures they've brought to the table tonight. A mouse, a snake. Yeah, there are animal loving Theodore Roosevelt's children all right. Kermit and Ethel are also present, chatting it up, but no one talks through dinner quite like our bespectacled mustachioed rough rider president TR. His speech may only slow down at the sight of servers with more of annual rourke's cooking. I can just picture his toothy grand growing as he gets a whiff of her famous biscuits, known as fat rascals. Oh, that smells good. And to either side of TR sits his two guests. His friend from Colorado, Philip Stewart, and of course, Booker T. Washington. Details on tonight are sparse, but I imagine Booker's great sense of humor and conversational skills are coming to bear. His nerves have faded. It seems the food and company alike are exquisite. With dinner over, the children head off to bed and the gentlemen make their way to the red room. The subject of discussion soon turns to the very issue on which Booker serves as an adviser to the president. Southern politics. There's no doubt that they mention teddy's recent victory. His recess appointment of former Alabama governor Thomas G Jones as a federal judge. Tom might be a former confederate officer and a Democrat, but he's an honorable man, opposed lynching and in favor of educating black Americans. Ah, that's why Booker recommended him. And now, the south loves TR. Aided by Booker's council and his southern blood from his Georgia born mother, teddy, the half southerner, as he likes to call himself, just might be the man to move the needle on race and break the Democratic Party's solid south. Or at least break Republican Party boss, Mark Hannah's hold on the GOP's southern delegates before the 1904 election. The men discuss their lofty dreams for the south until 10 p.m., then say good night, so Booker can catch the last train in New York. The next day, Booker is going about his business in the Big Apple when he notices a one liner in the New York tribune mentioning he dined with the president. Huh. Well, both he and teddy knew last night was somewhat significant. It was, after all, the first time a black man, a former slave no less, dying with a president in The White House. Teddy had even questioned briefly if he should invite Booker. But the mere fact that he wondered filled him with shame and solidified his resolve to do so. Yet, as Booker carries on in New York City and teddy does so in Washington D.C., it seems neither man fully grasps their dinners significance. There are a few exceptions, but newspapers south of the mason Dixon line come after both men. Hard. In Virginia, the Richmond dispatched proclaims, quote, Roosevelt dines a darkie. In Georgia, the Atlanta constitution complains that, quote, both politically and socially Roosevelt proposed to coddle the sons of ham, close quote. In North Carolina, the custodia gazette and the north carolinian. Both carry an editorial that shouts in all caps, quote away with Roosevelt and Negro equality, away with republicanism and all its abhorrent concomitants. But it isn't the death of his hoped for revival of republicanism in the south that worries teddy the most. It's the death threats, a South Carolina senator Benjamin Tillman announces. Quote, the actions of president Roosevelt in entertaining that will necessitate our killing a thousand in the south before they will learn their place again. Close quote. TR is baffled. Heartbroken. He tells a reporter, I had no thought whatever of anything, save of having a chance of showing some little respect to a man whom I cordially esteem as a good citizen and good American. Instead, teddy has pandemonium, as vulgar cartoons of his wife Edith circulate, opposing newspaper slam each other and, though a failure, a hired assassin, goes after Booker. The president has learned a hard lesson. Though he'll continue to counsel with Booker, teddy will never again break bread with the esteemed tuskegee educator, or any black person for that matter. In The White House.

History That Doesn't Suck
"mark hannah" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck
"A few minutes before 7 30 p.m.. A 46 year old man with close cropped hair, all of skin, and dressed in a smart black suit, is riding in a carriage through the streets of Washington D.C. to The White House. He's a tad anxious. Not that this is his first visit. No, no. In the month since William McKinley was assassinated and Theodore Roosevelt took office, the new president has already made it clear to this educator, southerner, and most influential black Americans that his council is very much desired. TR has already had him over. But this is different. Tonight, this gentleman a mister Booker T. Washington is going to The White House as the U.S. president's invited thinner guest. Turning up 1600 Pennsylvania circular drive, the carriage comes to a stop under The White House's iconic, hillard, port cocher. What thoughts must be going through Booker's mind? A natural diplomat, he frequently declined social invitations from why associates to avoid a possible misstep in this fraught, segregated era of Jim Crow. But one does not say no to the president of the United States. So, the tuskegee institute principle acts like the honored presidential guest that he is. Thinking his colleague whitfield McKinley for the ride, Booker then ascends The White House steps and walks past the black door keepers as he enters the executive mansion through its glass paneled entrance. The roosevelts might be a blue blooded American family, but there's nothing stuffy about this dinner table. Take First Lady, Edith Roosevelt. Per usual, Edith easily carries the conversation, even as she sits between and keeps an eye on her two young troublemakers. 7 year old Archie and almost four year old Quentin. I wonder which small creatures they've brought to the table tonight. A mouse, a snake. Yeah, there are animal loving Theodore Roosevelt's children all right. Kermit and Ethel are also present, chatting it up, but no one talks through dinner quite like our bespectacled mustachioed rough rider president TR. His speech may only slow down at the sight of servers with more of annual rourke's cooking. I can just picture his toothy grain growing as he gets a whiff of her famous biscuits, known as fat rascals. Oh, that smells good. And to either side of TR sits his two guests. His friend from Colorado, Philip Stewart, and of course, Booker T. Washington. Details on tonight are sparse, but I imagine Booker's great sense of humor and conversational skills are coming to bear. His nerves have faded. It seems the food and company alike are exquisite. With dinner over, the children head off to bed and the gentlemen make their way to the red room. The subject of discussion soon turns to the very issue on which Booker serves as an adviser to the president. Southern politics. There's no doubt that they mention teddy's recent victory. His recess appointment of former Alabama governor Thomas G Jones has a federal judge. Tom might be a former confederate officer and a Democrat, but he's an honorable man, opposed to lynching and in favor of educating black Americans. Ah, that's why Booker recommended him. And now the south loves TR. Aided by Booker's council and his southern blood from his Georgia born mother, teddy, the half southerner, as he likes to call himself, just might be the man to move the needle on race and break the Democratic Party's solid south. Or at least break Republican Party boss, Mark Hannah's hold on the GOP's southern delegates before the 1904 election. The men discussed their lofty dreams for the south until 10 p.m., then say good night, so Booker can catch the last train in New York. The next day, Booker is going about his business in the Big Apple when he notices a one liner in the New York tribune, mentioning he dined with the president. Huh. Well, both he and teddy knew last night was somewhat significant. It was, after all, the first time a black man, a former slave no less, dined with a president in The White House. Teddy had even questioned briefly if he should invite Booker. But the mere fact that he wondered filled him with shame and solidified his resolve to do so. Yet, as Booker carries on in New York City and teddy does so in Washington D.C., it seems neither man fully grasps their dinners significance. There are a few exceptions, but newspapers south of the mason Dixon line come after both men. Hard. In Virginia, the Richmond dispatch proclaims, quote, Roosevelt dines a darkie. In Georgia, the Atlanta constitution complains that, quote, both politically and socially, Roosevelt proposed to coddle the sons of ham, close quote. In North Carolina, the custodian gazette and the north carolinian. Both carry an editorial that shouts in all caps, quote away with Roosevelt and Negro equality, away with republicanism and all its abhorrent concomitants. But it isn't the death of his hoped for revival of republicanism in the south that worries teddy the most. It's the death threats, a South Carolina senator Benjamin Tillman announces, quote, the actions of president Roosevelt in entertaining that will necessitate our killing a thousand in the south before they will learn their place again. Close quote. TR is baffled. Heartbroken. He tells a reporter, I had no thought whatever of anything, save of having a chance of showing some little respect to a man whom I cordially esteem as a good citizen and good American. Instead, teddy has pandemonium, as vulgar cartoons of his wife Edith circulate, opposing newspaper slam each other and, though a failure, a higher assassin goes after Booker. The president has learned a hard lesson. Though he'll continue to counsel with Booker, teddy will never again break bread with the esteemed tuskegee educator, or any black person for that matter. In The White House.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"mark hannah" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Afternoons at 5 eastern, on Bloomberg radio, the Bloomberg business app and Bloomberg radio dot com. Donald Trump is dismissing the affidavit that was used to justify the raid on his Florida home on true social Trump used three exclamation marks to claim it, quote, heavily redacted. Trump also claimed he gave many documents to federal officials and that the judge should never have allowed the raid on his home. The affidavit revealed the former president, had several top secret documents stored at Mar-a-Lago. The U.S. State Department is confirming reports that an American was killed in Ukraine, Lisa Taylor has the latest. According to newsweek, the American was a volunteer fighting alongside Ukrainian forces, the State Department didn't give any further details about the American out of respect for the privacy of their family, several American volunteers have been killed in the war since the fighting began just over 6 months ago. And a manhunt is underway after a shooting leaves one person injured at a county fair in Arkansas, police said the shooting happened at ten 30 on Friday night, and that's the very latest, I'm Jim Forbes. Now this Bloomberg sports update Mark Hannah hit two clenched doubles and peed Alonso singled home the winning run in the bottom of the 9th inning to give the mets a 7 to 6 victory over the Colorado Rockies on Friday night at city field, Fred Beatty launched his second major league Homer and starling Marte had a two run triple for the national league east leaders who have won the first two games of the four game series. Can I put the mets ahead four three with an RBI double in the 6th? ASDS laced a three run double that gave Colorado a 6 four advantage in the 8th, but can assign it with a two run double in the bottom half of the inning. Edwin Diaz picks up the win in relief for the mets, and with Atlanta defeating St. Louis, but that's remained two games in front of the braves for the lead in the national league east. In Oakland, the Yankees defeated the athletics three to two, Aaron judge providing all of the offense for the Yankees, has judge bashed a three run Homer in the top of the 5th inning, judge leads the major leagues in both home runs and runs batted in with 49 and 109 Garrett Cole picks up the win his tenth of the season. He struck out 11 and 7 of the third innings and wandy Peralta earns his third save. The former Yankee JP Sears takes the loss for Oakland and falls to 5 and one. The little league World Series champion will be determined this weekend and Williamsport Pennsylvania. Team Asia Pacific from Taipei Taiwan will play Caribbean region champion carousel, this afternoon. Southeast region champ, Nolan's ville, Tennessee, will take on west winter Honolulu later in the day. The winners of today's games will play for the title on Sunday. The Red Bulls will be looking to extend their point straight to three matches in a row, New York playing host to under Miami sea act tonight, the Red Bulls currently fourth in the Eastern Conference with 41 points. And why CFC also an action this weekend, building visiting Orlando city on Sunday, and yc FC is third in the east with 45 points, with a Bloomberg sports update on Sam Rogers. Broadcasting

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"mark hannah" Discussed on Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
"Then there was a Rand light. It had everything. Including Mark Hannah hitting a three run game time Homer in the 7th inning. And then go ahead home run off of David Robertson in the 9th. So he was one of just a handful of players and met's history attending game tying home run in the 7th inning or later the game. And another game time or go ahead also in the 7th inning or later. And I love this list because you know that sounds like really incredible thing to happen and then here we go with this list. Curtis granderson, Scott Harrison, Todd seal, Robin Ventura, Willie montanez, Jim Gautam, and Jerry buch. I have to admit, I am not heard of Jerry before I look this up. So just a really fun less and a really crazy game. In Philadelphia and Sunday. Yeah, it really was. A big win for the mets. I've wanted to ask you about that race. I had a conversation with someone with the Atlanta organization over the weekend. Basically, my theory to him was that the braves getting punched in the mouth and back to back series by the mets, taking two of the mets taking two out of three and then four out of 5. I said to him, he said, that might have been the best thing that happened to your guys. Like they, they maybe, you know, is defending champs. Maybe that's what they needed. If you imagine this being like the 9th round of a 15 weighed heavyweight fight, does that make sense to you? Absolutely. I mean, we saw how psyched dansby Swanson was after the most recent series because they were told they got an ice cream machine and they won that series against Matt, but they really think motivation is real thing. When we saw this team come back, I mean, they were below 500 entering August last year. Go on to win the World Series. I do think motivation and having something in front of them like that. There's a really proven way for any team, but definitely this team. And the briefs are so good. I mean, it's really fascinating to see. I mean, the spark they've gotten for Michael here is the second and gone Grissom is just so, so awesome to say. Yeah, there's no doubt that the most watched first round series. You can book it right now is going to be the second place team from the national league. Right now that would be the braves and that team will be the number one wild card seat against the number two wild card scene at this moment. That would be the Padres. It could wind up being the Phillies. Maybe it'll wind up being the brewers, but that series will be a huge series because I feel like right now the braves and the mets might be the, you know, either the second is somewhere in the range of second best to fourth best team in baseball. The mets and the braves are two of the four best teams in baseball. You buy in? Absolutely. I mean, the braves went there on are so, so good. And I feel like we're all hoping that those two teams meet in the postseason. And finally, figured this out once and for all because that'll be really cool to see with all of these is going to Grom Scherzer everyone, you know? A 100%. All right, Sarah, thanks for doing this. And thanks for filling in last week. Thanks so much for having me. And thank you for that. I had so much fun with it. I really appreciate it. I think the most fun and Sunday's games

History That Doesn't Suck
"mark hannah" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck
"You know, his whole hating of bullies thing. I think that really comes out in his attitude with corporations. 100%. Yeah. 100%. Because we talk and think about, again, nuance, right? Getting into his actual words, that is for me what I see in his speeches. And I feel like that came out in the episodes from the quotes that we have from Roosevelt, his annual message to Congress, that sort of thing. And even his whole framing, right, of his three cs as historians will later put it. That's heating up with that terminology. But again, we've got the corporate regulation. Consumer protection is conservationism. But as he puts it, the square deal. And he doesn't invent that phrase, we'll go ahead and acknowledge that again. But he definitely it becomes. It becomes, yeah, it's teddy. He treats people squarely. He treats them fairly. And that's his that's his big thing, right? No bullies. He has things to say about the corporate world he has things to say about corrupt union leaders as well. He does not want to see a bully anywhere. Which I think is actually one of the things that I like about him. He doesn't let people really influence that. It doesn't matter if there are these super rich people that are like, I will donate lots of money to you if you don't do this, right? He doesn't care. He gets donations from Standard Oil. He gets donations from J Pierpont Morgan. And part of it is that he's the Republican candidate, Republicans at this point have kind of turned into the big business. As we come out of these Gilded Age years, we're frankly the parties just aren't terribly different. Up until I'd say that that whole minting issue. That's where things really kind of started to really diverge. Yeah. And have a difference. I don't think this was Mark Hannah. I'm pretty sure it was a different Republican, but the comment was made after they donated hundreds of thousands. And again, this is hundreds of thousands. In the early 20th century, hundreds of thousands to his presidential campaign, the dude starts taking shots at the trusts, right? He's the trust buster. Now he's actually not the biggest trust buster president, but he's the one who initiates it. He inaugurates it. Yeah. And dang, it's gonna eat at me, but you can Google this. You can look it up. If you really want to know who said it, but one of them said, roughly, if not spot on quote, we bought the son of a bitch, and he refused to stay bought. Because in their minds, that's what they did. We donated. We all understand. No one's saying it, but the understanding. This is the status quo. Yeah, you're going to support us because we support you. And it's an office. Thanks for the money. I don't know you craft. Northern securities. Sounds good, but no. Sorry, court. Yeah. Can we shift gears to conservationism a bit? Yes. Absolutely. So the cold open of episode one 14. It is such a simple story. And it's not terribly action packed, and yet it's one of my favorite TR moments because it's such a, it's an insight into him. Yes. Again. Into how he sees the world. Right. So how can I win in Florida? People hunt there. And hunting is going through a major reformation itself in this era. As species are being, frankly, hunted to death, extinct extinction. I'm not an expert on the history of hunting, so I won't go too deep into this, but both externally and internally within the hunting community. There's kind of this like, oh, we actually need to think about this. And that's part of where we end up with some of the laws that are actually supported by hunters, where they have to go buy. Tags, tags, stamps, it goes towards conservation because they realize, like, oh, this, we're not going to we should probably not hunt all of the animals out of existence. But we're definitely not there. The buffalo on the image, I mean, this is where I do wish somehow. We could put photos in a podcast that obviously doesn't work, but it's a haunting image from the 1880s of this just massive pyramid of buffalo skulls, terrifying, frankly. Nothing better illustrates. That is a photo that's worth far more than a thousand words. But all that said, pelican island, again, teddy, here you've got the elite New Yorker and hey, Central Park, people go watch birds, I'm not saying that you can't be that and like birds, but who is this guy, right? I like to write history books and my downtime. Also I love birds. When I'm not being chased by a big bear, listeners out there who love birds. You will be impressed to know that a lot of the conservation episode, the bird sounds that are in there. They are in the script, not as bird sound. Bird sound. But Townsend solitaire, because or the specific type of bird, because teddy knows what they are. So, and this actually does kind of get even to the efforts we make on pronunciation. We were able to find an excellent recording of the brown pelican. And we needed to purchase that. So we specifically purchased that sound. It brought it in. We could not find alas. The towns in solitary. No, I'm sure it's out there somewhere, but in a perfect world, if we had like three months, I'm sure we'd have gotten that, but we couldn't track one of those down, but we did seek out in the Bryan pelican. Well, we tried on both. We were just able to succeed with the brown pelican. And we found a kind of more generic sound that was pretty darn close to the Townsend solitude. You know who would listen and be able to know? What the difference is? Teddy. Teddy. Teddy. Yeah. Theodore Roosevelt, junior. Okay, well, all of that said. I just appreciate you brought the junior in there. His response. It shows the way that he doesn't look for permission to do things. I loved that. In the constitution. He looks for prohibitions. He's like, that's his concern. Is there a law against this? No. Can I do this? Perfect. Then I'm doing it. There's nothing that says you can't. And excellent. Sounds like permission to me. My favorite story in that episode is even if there is a law against it. The law doesn't go into effect for ten days. Oh my gosh. There's two it now for the next ten days and work. Night and day and have my staff work night and day. So that when you make the law, when I signed the law, it practically is ineffective is ineffectual.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"mark hannah" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"That's the very latest. I'm Jim Forbes. Now this Bloomberg sports update with Chris Bassett landing on the COVID related injury list, David Peterson stepped in to make the start for the mets, but he and his wife expecting a child any day now, Peterson turned in a gutsy performance, despite allowing a pair of solo homers to the rangers Marcus semien and Nathaniel Lowe, Peterson still turned in a quality start, going 6 innings, allowing just three runs on 5 hits, eliminates four three win over Texas at city field. Peterson signed a career high with ten strikeouts on the night, and is now 5 and one, Edwin Diaz earns his 17th save of the year. Mark Hannah broke out of an over 14 slump in the bottom of the fourth, pulling a single down the left field line to score Francisco Lindor to tie the game at one, and then later in the inning Eduardo Escobar drilled a three run Homer into the second deck and right field to give the mets a four to one lead. The mets got good news before the game they learned that Max Scherzer will be coming off the injured list and will make the start on Tuesday night again Cincinnati. Speaking of the reds, they lose to the braves 9 to one, so the myths remain three and a half games ahead of Atlanta in the national league east. Coming toward the end of a 20 game stretch without an off day, the Yankees received a break from mother nature as their game with the guardians and Cleveland postponed by rain. The game will be made up as part of a split double header later today, game one scheduled to start at 1210. The second game at 6 ten, the Yankees will send Garrett Cole to the mound for game one and Nestor Cortes will get the start for game two. Day 5 at Wimbledon, defending champion Novak Djokovic, advanced to the foreground, a straight set victory over my Americans, Jack sock, Tommy Paul, and Francis TFO all advance. On the women's side, third seed an bear advances to the fourth round, and also 5th seed Maria sakari was eliminated by tatjana Maria of Germany, with a Bloomberg sports update, I'm Tom Rogers.

Bitcoin Audible
"mark hannah" Discussed on Bitcoin Audible
"When the Ethereum Dao was exploited in June 2016 and 3.6 million ether tokens were stolen. The centralized nature of the protocol allowed for a reversal of the time chain, and therefore a reversal of the theft. So much for decentralization. In any organization, culture starts at the top. The 2016 Ethereum reversal set the standard for all DeFi behavioral norms to follow. Ethereum's wartime pivot to centralization forever normalized purportedly decentralized but actually centralized, reversals of any non approved realities. A power used and abused by DeFi repeatedly ever since most recently, by Quan. These periodic and predictable attempts at reality reversal represent daytime theft by the rulers of the ruled. No different or better than the crisis playbooks of central banks. Decentralization for thee, not for me. Gotta pump those numbers up. Those are rookie numbers in this racket. Mark Hannah, Wolf of Wall Street on total value locked in DeFi. Perhaps the most common metric employed to appraise in value DeFi tokens. Quote, total value locked or TVL. Represents neither total, nor value, nor locked. Zero for three. Focusing on value. First, recall that collateral means something pledged as security for the repayment of a loan and is always an asset. Never a liability. A canonical example of collateral is the home in the context of a mortgage. The value of the hum is the V in the loan to value. LTV ratio. And the size of the mortgage is the L hypothesis the home itself, the collateral, is not a thing. In contrast, DeFi projects often represent and rely on a series of re hypotheses. The collateral in one application can be used in others, ad infinitum, thus the V and TVL refers to gross, system wide notional value, achieved via unboundedly numerous, and necessarily opaque re hypothesis. Entirely unrelated to the concept, and indeed, essentially, the opposite of true collateral. Without an accounting of true collateral. DeFi allows no possible tracking of the degree of resultant system wide leverage. Only the gross notional. A larger gross notional V is perversely perceived as a sign of system strength. Insidiously attracting more and more fresh capital into the project. This is akin to measuring the health of a bank by its assets, not its equity. In 2008, for a moment, the acquisitive RBS royal bank of Scotland was proudly the quote biggest bank in the world, by assets. Insolvent at the time, RBS shareholders subsequently lost 87%. In the words do not mean what you think they mean world of DeFi. Investor attraction to a high V can perversely sow the seeds of a project's demise. A high V alerts hackers to the decentralized prize, see ronin 2022, Polly 2021. Wormholes, 2022, BitMart 2021, beanstalk, 2022, compound, 2021. Vulcan 2021, cream 2021 and badger 2021 for recent thefts of over $100 million. While in a different context, the driven ecosystem leverage primes algorithmic stablecoins to topple at their first true test of fragility.

History That Doesn't Suck
"mark hannah" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck
"Announced that its prosecuting his railroad stock holding company, northern securities. What nerve from Pierpont's perspective he wonders. Who is this president to disrupt the economy? And his AG philander Knox, AKA sleepy fill, who built his career in no small part by building combinations, who is he to prosecute. And under the toothless all but forgotten Sherman antitrust act a boot? This is unreal. But fine. J Pierpont talked sense into Grover Cleveland over the gold issue in 1895. He'll make TR see reason today. JP enters The White House. He greets president T Roosevelt and AG sleepy fill as pleasantly as he can. Flanked by two powerful supporters, Republican senators Mark Hannah and Chauncey depuy. Pierpont comes across less bitter and more curious as he asks. If he's done something wrong, why didn't the president just tell him so it could be fixed? Cool as a cucumber, teddy answers. That is just what we did not want to do. All the more puzzled Pierpont replies. If we have done anything wrong, send your man to my man, and they can fix it up. That can't be done. The attorney general now breaks in back in his boss. We don't want to fix it up. We want to stop it. Are you going to attack my other interests? The steel trust and others? The president replies. Certainly not. Unless we find out that, in any case, they have done something that we regard as wrong. The meeting concluded, teddy turns to his loyal attorney general sleepy Phil and shares his big takeaway. That is the most illuminating illustration of the Wall Street point of view. Mister Morgan could not help regarding me as a big rival operator who either intended to ruin all of his interests, or could be induced to come to an agreement to ruin none. And so, a showdown is set between two incredibly powerful men with very different views. The one, a God among bankers who sure he knows what's best for the nation's economy. The other, the U.S. president, who sure a government granting corporations the privilege of existing should maintain oversight and ensure competition remains in the market. To teddy, that's a more just and safer bet. Square deal that any American should be able to count on. But the banker and the president won't get relief from one another, as northern securities company V United States winds its way through the legal system. As the year 1902 presses on, another issue

History That Doesn't Suck
"mark hannah" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck
"So long as he was not appointed as a labor man, or as a representative of labor. They did not object to my exercising any latitude I chose in the appointments so long as they were made under the headings they had given. I shall never forget the mixture of relief in amusement I felt when I thoroughly grasped the fact that while they would heroically submit to anarchy rather than half tweedledum, yet if I would call it tweedle D they would accept it with rapture. It gave me an illuminating glimpse into one corner of the mighty brains of these. Captains of industry. And so, it all comes together. The executives even allow Catholic bishop L spalding as a 6th commissioner and the actual sociologist, commissioner of labor Carol Wright, to serve as a recorder and thus de facto 7th. In short order, the commission lands in the middle. The union wanted a 20% pay increase in the workday cut from ten hours to 8. They get a 10% wage increase and a 9 hour workday. John Mitchell's content his union members are content. After 100 60 four days of striking, they return to the coal mines on October 23rd, 1902. The nation won't freeze to death this winter. Teddy knows none of this could have happened without unlikely allies. Especially his, shall we say, frenemy? J Pierpont Morgan. TR writes to JP. My dear Morgan. It really does begin to look as if there was light ahead. Let me thank you for the service you have rendered the whole people. If it had not been for your going into the matter, I do not see how the strike could have been settled at this time. And the consequences that might have followed upon its being unsettled when the cold weather set in are in fact dreadful to contemplate. I thank you and congratulate you with all my heart. To our knowledge, here upon never replies. Think much speak little write nothing, you know? Or he could still be upset at the president for prosecuting his northern securities company for having possibly violated the Sherman antitrust act. We've seen this conflict faster in the background throughout the whole coal strike. But little more of substance has happened since the Roosevelt administration's February 1902 announcement that it would prosecute this gigantic railroad stock holding company. The following year, though, in April, 1903, the U.S. 8th circuit court shocks the nation. It hands down a unanimous four O ruling against the northern securities company, calling it an illegal trade restraining combination. Whether or not the company had abused its power is a moot question. The merger of railroad interests quote destroyed every motive for competition between the two roads. Stunned the defendant's appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. Meanwhile, their hopes are buoyed that September by a Minnesota judge, who ruling in a separate state lawsuit concludes northern securities does not violate any state laws. Good grief. Thus, as the case goes to that final arbiter of U.S. law, the Supreme Court, both have reason to keep hope alive. The case is heard that December. The court comes back with a decision in March of the following year. It's Monday. March 14th, 1904. We're in a domed two story semicircular chamber at the U.S. capitol. This impressive space housed the U.S. Senate prior to the Civil War. But now, the U.S. Supreme Court calls it home. And this home is packed. Word has spread that the justices will give their decision today on northern securities. And the knowledge that this decision will either confirm or set new legal precedent with far reaching effects on the world of business has drawn a standing room only crowd, including the likes of attorney general sleepy Phil Knox, senator Henry Cabot lodge, and newly appointed Secretary of War, Howard taft. Deeply interested, but not in the room. Our president Teddy Roosevelt and banker JPMorgan. At noon, a clerk cries out. Oh yay. Oh yay. God save this honorable court. The crowd quiets down as the 9 silk robe judges. Take their seats. From his place in the middle, the massively mustached long haired chief justice, Melville fuller, looks to associate justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. To the disappointment of the audience, Oliver proceeds to read about another case. But it's not long before the chief justice looks to his Kentucky born collie, associate justice John Marshall Harlan. The southerner calls out. Case number two 77. John proceeds to set up the case. The question is northern securities, a combination of a conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce among the states or with foreign states. Does it monopolize any part of such trade or commerce? After a county much of the history we already know, John finally lets the cat out of the bag. The court has found that, in its reading of the Sherman antitrust act, quote, no scheme or device could more effectively and certainly suppress free competition between the constituent companies. The decision came down to the wire, 5 justices against four. But the matter is settled. Northern securities is deemed an illegal competition killing monopoly. JPMorgan and his associates have 30 days to dismantle it or face criminal charges. Teddy and many on Main Street USA celebrate victory, while Wall Street, aware that this sets new legal precedent, trembles. The chronologically overlapping tales of the northern security company and the coal strike of 1902 is, as the saying goes, stranger than fiction. How odd that banker JPMorgan became Theodore Roosevelt's simultaneous antagonist and ally. It truly is, as historian Richard hofstadter will later note of JP and senator Mark Hannah's roles in Pennsylvania's coal strikes. Quote, ill accorded with the stereotypes of progressive thinking that dollar Mark Hannah and JPMorgan should have attended as midwives at the birth of the neutral state. Now let's pause on hofstadter's final three words there. The neutral state. That sums up well, teddy's intent with his square deals first see. Corporate regulation. As we heard TR made clear in his 1901 address to Congress, he is not opposed to business. He does not see himself as the enemy of the captains of industry. Teddy sees himself as saving the U.S. from both Gilded Age born competition killing corporations and the radicals their excess inspires. To quote a letter TR will later write in his second term to at that point, attorney general Charles Joseph Bonaparte. We seek to control law defying wealth in the first place to prevent its doing evil. And in the next place, to avoid the vindictive and dreadful radicalism, which, if left uncontrolled, it is certain in the intro rouse. Sweeping attacks upon all property, upon all men of means, without regard to whether they do well or ill would sound the death knell of the republic. In such attacks become inevitable if decent citizens permit rich men whose lives are corrupt and evil, to domineer and swollen pride, unchecked and unhindered over the destinies of this country. We seek to stop wrongdoing. We are the staunch upholders of every honest man, whether businessman or wage worker. In brief, teddy's more interested in following his moral compass than giving himself to any ideology. For him, it's just about getting everyone a fair shake. Or again, as he puts it. A square deal. And yes, I did say that letter comes from his second term. Between negotiating the coal strike and winning the case against northern securities, democratic challenger judge Alton Parker doesn't have a prayer. In 1904, teddy mobs the floor with him, taking 56.4% of the popular vote and 336 Electoral College votes to the judge's 140. The only states to vote Democrat are the south. Even JPMorgan begrudgingly contributes $150,000 to TR's reelection campaign. But there are so many other trusts to challenge. And we haven't even begun to talk about the consumer protection and conservationism aspects of the square deal, nor have we observed as teddy speaks softly while carrying that big stick of his around the globe. Sounds like TR and his famous grin aren't going anywhere anytime soon. His presidential story has just begun. To see the dozen suckers created and hosted by me, Greg Jackson, episode research and written by Greg Jackson, Zachary beaver. Production by airship. Sound designed by Derek Barron's and Molly Bach. The music composed by Greg Jackson, arrangement and additional composition by Lindsey Graham airship. For bibliography of all primary secondary sources consulted right in this episode, visit HTTPS podcast dot com. HTTPS supported by fans at Patreon dot com slash history that doesn't suck. My gratitude to kind souls providing funding to help us keep filming. Thank you, a special thanks to our patrons whose monthly gift puts them at producer status. And at Avril, Fox car barrack, Christopher Beckett, Victoria Bennett bush, Amanda and Kelsey brack, Henry brunches, Thomas bug, Bill Caldwell, Beth and christianson, Christopher coddle, Jason Carson, Charles devier, John frugal dougal, Kyle decker, audra's Joe Davis, Michael and Rachel her film, CF, Nate Ferrer, Kyle gensler, Paul go wringer, legal movement, Jennifer and Houston,

History That Doesn't Suck
"mark hannah" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck
"Announced that its prosecuting his railroad stock holding company, northern securities. What nerve from Pierpont's perspective he wonders. Who is this president to disrupt the economy? And his AG philander Knox, AKA sleepy fill, who built his career in no small part by building combinations, who is he to prosecute. And under the toothless all but forgotten Sherman antitrust act a boot? This is unreal. But fine. J Pierpont talked sense into Grover Cleveland over the gold issue in 1895. He'll make TR see reason today. JP enters The White House. He greets president T Roosevelt and AG sleepy fill as pleasantly as he can. Flanked by two powerful supporters, Republican senators Mark Hannah and Chauncey depuy. Pierpont comes across less bitter and more curious as he asks. If he's done something wrong, why didn't the president just tell him so it could be fixed? Cool as a cucumber, teddy answers. That is just what we did not want to do. All the more puzzled Pierpont replies. If we have done anything wrong, send your man to my man, and they can fix it up. That can't be done. The attorney general now breaks in back in his boss. We don't want to fix it up. We want to stop it. Are you going to attack my other interests? The steel trust and others? The president replies. Certainly not. Unless we find out that, in any case, they have done something that we regard as wrong. The meeting concluded, teddy turns to his loyal attorney general sleepy Phil and shares his big takeaway. That is the most illuminating illustration of the Wall Street point of view. Mister Morgan could not help regarding me as a big rival operator who either intended to ruin all of his interests, or could be induced to come to an agreement to ruin none. And so, a showdown is set between two incredibly powerful men with very different views. The one, a God among bankers who sure he knows what's best for the nation's economy. The other, the U.S. president, who sure a government granting corporations the privilege of existing should maintain oversight and ensure competition remains in the market. To teddy, that's a more just and safer bet. Square deal that any American should be able to count on. But the banker and the president won't get relief from one another, as northern securities company V United States winds its way through the legal system. As the year 1902 presses on, another issue

Bloomberg Radio New York
"mark hannah" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"In the major leagues pitched the mets to a world championship in 1969 afterwards though that's powered their way to attend three win over Arizona using four home runs For Francisco Lindor homered from both sides of the plate Robinson could own and Sterling morte also went deep Another impressive outing from Chris Bassett who allowed one run on two hits over 6 innings striking out 6 It wasn't all smooth sailing for the nuts as an outfielder's Mark Hannah and Brandon nimmo were placed on the injured list after a coach tested positive for COVID-19 Another television for Yankee closer or oldest trap in the issue is a basis loaded walk to the oriole and ceremonious on the bottom of the 11th and the Yankees lose to the Orioles two to one The lone Yankee run came on the third on an RBI single by John Carlos Stanton the Orioles tied it in the 7th on an RBI single by Jorge Mateo Jordan Montgomery started for the Yankees went 5 allowing just three hits A four time Stanley Cup champion with the New York islanders who scored 573 goals during his career has died Mike bossy lost his battle to terminal lung cancer He's making remembered by the team's president and general manager has an icon not only on Long Island but across the entire hockey world Bossy was selected in the first round of the 1977 NHL entry draft the number of golds he scored the most in franchise history he won four consecutive Stanley cups from 1980 to 1983 The islanders keep their slim playoff chances alive with a three zero win over Montreal Ilya siroc and turned into 7th shutout of the season stopping 44 shots With a Bloomberg sports update I'm Tom Rogers.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"mark hannah" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"What a glorious day Vice president Harris spoke about the vote during an event at the national art gallery last night One person who can't be at today's celebration is House speaker Nancy Pelosi She tested positive for COVID yesterday Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts more than a 120 countries on Michael Barr in this is Bloomberg Nathan All right Michael thank you Coming up to 5 ten on Wall Street time for the Bloomberg sports update good morning John Stan shower Good morning Nathan since 1970 the mets only won the World Series once but what they have done over the last 53 years is be dominant on opening day and incredible record of 40 and 13 It was 5 to one in Washington Tyler McGill was surprise opening day starter by scoreless innings 8 of the 9 met starters at hits Robinson Geno Pete Alonso and Mark Hannah all had two hits tonight in D.C. It's Max Scherzer's match debut will face his old team with the skies now clear Yankees and Red Sox set to open the season today at the stadium Garrett Cole versus Nathan naval He also this afternoon round two of the masters Tiger Woods has a late tee time that gives him a chance to recover from his first competitive round in a year and a half It was a very impressive one for Tiger a one under par 71 To play this golf course and to do what I did today to make to hit the shots on the right sponsor I know where to hit it to a lot of these pins and I'm missing a correct spots and give myself a good angles and I did that all day and I was able to make a few putts.

77WABC Radio
"mark hannah" Discussed on 77WABC Radio
"Going I just have I have to say thank you for letting me on tonight And I also want to say that I feel so fortunate and so glad that I can hear people I can relate to with our current issues in this country Actually a Hispanic gay male and let me tell you that I'm too minorities and there's no way that especially the gay community they always talk about how Trump is Trump that and they always want to bash him and this and the other And let me tell you this is all BS literally and the Latino community They're being fed lies to by telemundo and Univision Everybody knows that But a lot of the Hispanic community is waking up I know my parents are in their early 60s and they always talk about and they always say yeah this administration is really messing up this whole American Dream the dream that we had foreseen you know when we were back in our homelands we saw that coming to this country was going to be the best thing for us And I thank my parents for what they did for us because they got in line They did everything through immigration We came here legally And we did everything we had to do And now we have this crisis and it's just like come on now Get in line you know do what we did It's just this whole country is burning to the ground and we hate to see that because we came here with nothing but hope and dreams and we've achieved some so many things in our lifetimes but it's just so sad everything going on And but I'm happy to hear that people are waking up in both sides of my community Let me know what I mean Let me ask you a question Being either pro Trump or fairly conservative and gay and Hispanic particularly in the gay community can be tough right It's very yes It's like I have no friends Well what are the left I would do for the gay community other than give them talking points I feel like nothing They never went Obama was running in 2008 but asked about gay marriage He said he opposed it Exactly And Joe Biden said the same thing I mean it just doesn't add up to me And then I show people all the how obvious I mean the evidence I mean you can YouTube this It's all over the Internet Anybody can watch these videos and how are they not paying attention to those things And yet it's crazy to me that people just want to go out and shout Biden by them Biden when he's been a politician for so long and has done nothing And let me ask you this Joy Reed Joy Reid had some of the most poisonous anti gay tweets years ago not ultra many years ago but years ago and she blamed it on hackers who came into our system and nobody could ever find these hackers because she's a liar And so she used to and it wasn't just the gay community other minority communities too And but she's okay She's got absolution you know And so she can get on there now and MSNBC say pretty much whatever she wants to say The left gets away with this stuff They do And you know I run a small business and a lot of my clients that come and see me I'm a hairstylist by the way but a lot of my clients that come see me there Oh you know minorities but I always try to very like tactically and slowly kind of push in and tell them what's going on and to try to wake them up Because everything that's going on I mean they just have to wake up And see everything for what it is And I feel like I try not to discuss too much politics in my business Yeah Try to exactly And I tried to but I do try to acknowledge some things to tell them hey you know inflation is bad right now Have you noticed you know it's just you know at the top And I try to make it very passive That's why I run out of time You're a hairstylist Yes What do you do from Paul guy like me What do you do for me You basically have to cut the hair short right I have here's just something I can put on man No no I don't want fake hair There's nothing you can do really And you know what I don't care My wife loves me that's good enough for me All right You're a great guy Call again Appreciate it Let's continue shall we Let's see Jim Jacksonville You got these All right Jacksonville Arkansas The great KRI and Jim how are you Hello Mark Hannah Jones was embarrassed when she visited a Hiroshima how would she feel if she visited the Arizona memorial in Pearl Harbor Hawaii I don't think that's on her list of places to visit do you No I guess She should go there She might want to check out you know the different military the different military cemeteries I wonder if she's ever been to a Civil War battlefield You know these people are such frauds.