with the legacy of your mother and father. your father was the architect of these great society programs. we're trying to preserve this right now against these budget cuts and against this very backwards thinking with regard to issues of income inequality and poverty reduction. >> barbara, neera, how do you think we bring, you know, bring this down the line so to speak? get some movement on this? we have a moment here. there's a lot going on. a lot of discussion. seems to be some -- how do we take it across the goal line, as they say? >> i think what's very interesting about this moment is actually how you're seeing a bipartisan interest in the conversation. obviously there are different views about solutions, but the fact that rising inequality is becoming something that even republicans are talking about i think is really a demonstration of what we've seen in the "shriver report" and the poll, itself, which is there's bipartisan support for issues like paid leave, childcare, because people recognize we're in a new economy. that people are working harder and their wages are down, and