Court comes out tuesday. Ilia, welcome, good to see you again. Good to be on. Paul what is in your view Justice Ginsburgs main legacy . Well, hes a legal giant as Justice Scalia put it in writing about her times magazine as most influential people years ago. Her pioneering legacy litigation strategy, achieving so much to turn back sex discrimination, patience, professionalism, her niceness, universally liked and famously the wonderful relationship with Justice Scalia. The last 10, 15 years shes mostly been known for her descents, famous majority opinions probably the one requiring the Virginia Military institute to allow women coo cadets. You know she wears a particular one that she will be passionate about the majority. Paul one of the things i mentioned even in the last 10, 15 years she was in the majority. He wrote the opinion in scaling the u. S. And she was with the majority in the mcdonald case where they overturned what were overzealous prosecutions and elastic views of the law taken by prosecutors. This is one to have few and more interesting areas where she was in agreement with Justice Scalia. It was kind of a left and the right against the middle, the principle against the pragmatic, if you will, schools of interpretation and, yes, that that pushback against prosecutorial overreach certainly shouldnt be overlooked. Paul all right, how does the court change if it does lets make the assumption the republicans nominate and confirm a new justice, 63 republican leftcenter right majority. Paul chief justice as median vote. I dont want to say swing because theres a different concept. The new median would be either Brett Kavanaugh or the new nominee. That makes for a different balance of power and so all of those areas where john roberts just this past term was voting based on prerogatives other than his view of the law, that would all shift and so controversial areas from affirmative action to abortion to religious interpretation, religious liberty. Those would no longer be subject to one vote. They would be shifting in a different way. Paul one of the things weve learned from centerright justices over the over the inclg Justice Gorsuch and especially Justice Roberts you cant predict where theyre going to come out, so do you think that its a sure thing, for example, that abortion law changes fundamentally or, for example, that racial preference law changes fundamentally . Well, i dont think roe v. Wade would be overturned, planned parenthood versus casey. Where certain regulations might be validated in past term would be allowed to go through. Marginal changes on abortion. Thats an area where john roberts has been particularly strong, the line about the way to prevent Racial Discrimination is to prevent, stop discriminating based on race and thats one area where kavanaugh would have shifted the court away from what kennedy was doing, so already even without this additional vote, do i think that if the whatever regard case or another one comes up to see we could see a change in the courts juries prudence. Paul you wrote recently for us that you thought the politics of judicial appointments and nominations has favored republicans and not democrats which is one to have reasons that joe biden has released a list of potential nominees. Explain your logic for us. First of all as i where in the book, politics has always been part of the process. George washington had a nominee rejected for various political reasons, for example, but the way that politics has played a role has shifted and what we have now is several trends where theories of the con constitutios and statutes map when the parties are more i didnt do logically sorted than the civil war if not ever. So in that kind of environment where the court is very important and each seat is very important, of course, those battles are going to be fraught. Joe biden has been power player, elbow on the issue when he was judiciary chairman but historically republicans tend to be the ones who run on the court. It happened in 2016 where i think without the scalia vacancy donald trump wouldnt have won. The one exception to that is bill clinton in 1992 ran soon after planned parenthood versus casey was decided but Hillary Clinton didnt discuss even Merrick Garland during virtual conventions, no mention of Merrick Garland or Ruth Bader Ginsburg and biden has not released a list, must be facing some pressure at this point. Paul we have 45 seconds left, how seriously do you take the threat from people on the left that if republicans do go ahead and confirm a nominee here in the next in this congress, if the democrats take the senate, they will, in fact, break the filibuster and pass the court . This is political speculation but i think they are angry enough that if trump is reelected and or republicans keep the senate, they probably they wont be able to but Court Packing would be off the table but if the republicans do confirm and the democrats sweep in the election, its a very real possibility. At that point they have to add four seats which would be significant, indeed, maybe Mitch Mcconnell would make some sort of deal where he promised not to confirm in lameduck in promise not to pack the court in ten years but theres a lot of game theory to go through on that and the result of the election becomes ever more important. Paul all right, thank you so much for coming in. Fascinating stuff. When we come back, President Trump urging Senate Republicans to fill the ginsburg vacancy without delay, will Mitch Mcconnell schedule a vote before the november election or wait until the lameduck session, our panel weighs in on the politics and timing of the nomination fight next. Take a deep breath. Go here findyourmbcvoice. Com take a deep breath. Keeping your oysters growing while keeping your business growing has you swamped. you need to hire i need indeed indeed you do. The moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base so you can start hiring right away. Claim your seventyfivedollar credit when you post your first job at indeed. Com promo paul President Trump urging the republican run senate to fill the Supreme Court vacancy left by Justice Ginsburg, Mitch Mcconnell vowing friday night to hold a vote on the president s pick but not saying when. Is the senate likely to take up the nomination before the november election or in the lameduck session after. Lets ask our panel wall street journal columnist and deputy Editorial Page Editor dan henninger, columnist kim strassel and Editorial Board member kyle peterson. So kyle, you follow the Supreme Court closely, what do you think will be the main legacy of Justice Ginsburg . Kyle well what shapiro said it pretty well. We live in ginsburgs world and when i say that im thinking about some of the cases that she worked on the in the 70s before on the court. There was a case involving different drinking ages for young men and young women. There was a case involving different treatment of men and women in jury service and in Social SecuritySurvivor Benefits and in 2020, it is unsunkable of a law that we treat women differently. Thats part of her legacy. Paul its interesting to me, dan, the collegiality, we have a piece from ken starr praising her how easy she was to get along and even though you disagree on the law, very little of that goes on outside of the Supreme Court. Dan. Daniel i think thats the point, paul, those days are over, you know, another example of that was famously Ronald Reagan and House Speaker tip oneil who supposedly got together after the sun went down and would share a glass of scotch and tell jokes to one another. Those days are gone. The polarization is almost complete. Politics has become very intense and, look, donald trump won the presidency and the Democratic Party waged has waged daily war for nearly 4 years against this presidency and i think to use a more half metaphor from the godfather, we are going to the mattresses. The two parties are about to have it out, basically a street battle. Paul on that point, kim, Mitch Mcconnell said there will be a vote, didnt say when, giving himself flexibility which he is famous for but i assume he has two things in mind, does he have the 50 votes to confirm before the election and number 2 how would that vote, that confirmation affect keeping the senate majority. Take us through Mitch Mcconnells mindset as hes thinking about this. Kimberley one thing thats certain the white house will nominate someone soon because Republican Voters are going to demand to see action taken on this and then you go to Mitch Mcconnell and that question about whether or not he has the people he needs. So all eyes are on 3 republican, quote, moderates Lisa Murkowski said she would not vote on a nominee this year and then all eyes on mitt romney and Susan Collins and a lot of this will depend on what they say. You can imagine that there are a lot of background conversations going on just right now. As in terms of in terms of the broader electorate, though, and what this means for election, one thing that i have seen a lot of people pointing out you have democrats out there saying this would be dangerous for you, you dare not bring this up, theyll be a revolt, but if you look at the last time we had a major fight over a Supreme Court nominee in Brett Kavanaugh, it was the four democrats in competitive states in 2018 who lost their seats for voting against the nomination heidi heitkam, bill nelson. I think republicans feel this is a winner in battleground. Paul i want to get to the election impact but on the confirmation impact, kyle, you can only afford to lose 4, right, you can lose 3 and then Vice President pence can give you 51 from the 5050 split. But i guess the question is do you have that if you have the votes, do you go before the election or do you wait . What dow do what do you think . Kyle kyle you can make an argument that youre following regular order and youre not doing this in the lameduck session after the people have spoken and second as soon as the nomination hearing start running democrats will talk about how they are going to if they take the senate add justices to the Supreme Court and say youre cory gardner in a swing state youre running for a reelection, you have a pretty good argument, the Supreme Court has 9 people on it since 1869 and you have to elect me to keep it that way. Paul the other thing that they have to think about is what happens if theres an election thats very close, at the president ial level or senate seats thats toss intoed the courts as recently seen likely given the way that some state courts are behaving lately. You dont want a 44 split which means the Supreme Court cant settle these kinds of disputes. Daniel exactly right, paul, thats another Strong Political argument doing this before the election because if for chance donald trump wins the election, assuming its going to be very close in at least 6 battleground states. We are expecting that all the way through the end to have year. Why allow the nomination to be put in jeopardy by a big legal fight, monumental legal fight over the legitimacy of this election. I think they should get it behind them before the election takes place. Paul fascinating to see how it plays out. When we come back Justice Ginsburg defending the 2020 Election Campaign as both sides gear up for a bitter battle over the future of the high courts, more to mobilize voters on the left or the right [ engine rumbling ] [ beeping ] [ engine revs ] uh, you know theres a 30minute limit, right . Tell that to the rain. [ beeping ] for those who were born to ride, theres progressive. Our flight is early tomorrow. And its a long flight too. Once we get there, we will need. Buttercup its just a cold. If you have high blood pressure, a cold is not just a cold. Most cold medicines may raise blood pressure. Choose coricidin hbp. The brand with a heart. For powerful cold relief without raising your blood pressure. Unlike ordinary memory wansupplements. Ter . Neuriva has clinically proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. Memory. Focus. Accuracy. Learning and concentration. Try it today with our moneyback guarantee paul the death of justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg for bitter confirmation battle, would the upcoming fight mobilize voters on the left or the right . Dan, i guess the first question is, is this going to be dominant issue, the court, that its going to put covid19 and the economy in the back burner . Daniel no, i think what it does is makes the front burner very, very crowded. Look, we know what joe bidens Election Strategy was going to be to this point going forward. You can summarize it in two words. Donald trump, right . Joe biden was running against donald trump, his persona and the idea that he was unfit to be president and relatedly his management of the coronavirus. Well, i think that strategy has just been completely overthrown here this past weekend with Justice Ginsburgs death. Now the Supreme Court is clearly an issue, control of the senate is an issue because it relates to the future of the courts. Law and order itself has become an issue, violence in americas cities. Coronavirus is still there, the economy. But i think the other issue that comes into play is the nature of the Democratic Party. Joe biden has been doing kind of a funny scorpion dance, trying to keep the idea that its Bernie Sanders party at arms length but more that we talk about the future, Supreme Court and activists judging and i expect donald trump will, then i think this election becomes much more about party than it does about personality. Paul yeah, kim, maybe the chances of ticketsplitting just fell quite a bit. I want to push back on your observation in the previous block about who this helps. I take your point it could help republicans, it has in the past. But why wouldnt this simply mobilize the left, you know what, we cant afford to stay home, we really need to get out and retake the senate because if they do confirm somebody, then we need to do we need to pack the court so that we dont lose the court in 2021. Why wouldnt that work for the democrats . Kimberley well, because i think the left is already motivated in that regard just in terms of donald trump. As dan just explained. But i think that this is a different issue for republicans. The reason this always helps republicans is it makes it not just the white house and makes it about something that they care deeply about and if you look at electoral politics, it is usually the case that republicans take much more to heart and vote on the issue of the Supreme Court. Its why people credit Donald Trumps release of the list last year we cementing his election. When i look ahead here and i look at some of the groups that donald trump struggled with a little bit more in 2016 in particular, for instance, evangelicals, theres an opportunity that this particular issue reengages issue and potentially convinces some of those on the fence or people who dont really like Donald Trumps personality to view this election as dan said about something much more than donald trump. Paul and you think that that holds even is it better for republicans if they vote before the election or hold the vote until afterwards saying, basically holding tout vote on confirmation as a reason to vote for a republican . Kimberley well, again, some of that will be guided with people within Mitch Mcconnells caucus and whether or not theyre willing to go along with that but i would agree that i think its better to do it beforehand, to really also just to have that situation in congress where we get to see yet again how democrats behave towards this nominee especially as if it sounds donald trump may well nominate a woman and potentially one that has recently been through the Senate Confirmation process, a lot of the people on the short list are on Appeals Courts. Theyve had votes. They picked up votes from democrats. How do they react then, whats their behavior and how does that play into peoples votes. Paul kyle, the president recently updated his Supreme Court list of people to potentially nominate. Joe biden hasnt released one. Do you think the pressure will be overwhelming to do so or can he duck it . Kyle i think he will duck that one. He doesnt want to be backed into the corner and wants his options open and why why do that now . Hes busy leading a fight against this nominee. Paul so you think that he can get away with that, really . I mean, just give him a pass. Kyle i think he will try to. I think it depends in parton who the in part on who the nominee is. In 2016 the difference is that that seat was antonin scalias seat who was a revered seat on the right and Justice Ginsburg on the left. Nobody is really enthused about joe biden. Paul kim, you want to respond to that . [laughter] kimberley well, look, theres a reason that joe biden doesnt want to put a list out because its not good politics, okay, that goes back to my point about how this energizes and motivates not just republicans but people on the middle. And that is the risk to democrats, if they were to put out a list that could be motivate to go people in the middle and also just to push back on kyle a little bit. I think that republicans can be very engaged with this because scalia was a revered figure and this is republicans opportunity to cement majority on the court for generations. Paul do you think its barrett, shes on the Appeals Court now . Kimberley theres four other women who are on Appeals Court. Paul that would be fascinating to watch as well. When we come back the abraham accord and the balance of power and what this historic signing means and the peace in the region and the threat from iran. Support immune health. Noand if youre troubledan a liby falls and bleeds,ners. Worry follows you everywhere. Over 100,000 people have left blood thinners behind with watchman. Its a onetime, minimally invasive procedure that reduces stroke risk and bleeding worryfor life. Watchman. Its one time. For a lifetime. These humans, those humans. Groovin, and golden. Its about getting more than Health Insurance and a partner who listens and acts. Humana calls it human care. Its talking to a doctor from your couch, or helping you find a cheaper prescription before you ask. Its helping you fix the rugs so you dont fall, and keeping you social, online or off. Its getting to know you, so you can be your healthiest. Thats our superpower. Thats human care. From humana. The nations of the region are breaking free from the failed approaches to have past. Todays signing sets history on a new course and there will be other countries very, very soon that will follow these great leaders. Paul that was President Trump on tuesday at the signing ceremony for the abraham accord, a pair of historic agreements normalizing diplomatic relations between israel, United Arab Emirates and bahrain. The president predicting the peace deals would set the middle east history on a new course. What do they mean for the balance of power in the region and the threat from iran in particular . Lets ask john, senior counselor at the foundation for defense of democracies and served as National Security adviser to Vice President dick cheney and secretary of state warren christopher. So welcome back to this show. Thank you, paul. Paul so why is why are these agreements, what do these agreements do to advance American Interest in the middle east . Well, in the first place, paul, its important to remind everybody that its been 26 years since the last time america actually brokered a peace deal between israel and arab neighbors. Thats a very long dry spell, to broker these deals now, to actually double the number of arab countries at peace in the space of a month is a dramatically affirmation of American Leadership in the middle east and of the very unique role that america plays. No other great power could have played this role, not the chinese, not the russians, not the un or the eu, only america has the history, the relationships and the trust and confidence of local parties to step up and make a major diplomatic move like this, not without risk to some of these parties particularly from bad actors like iran and turkey. Paul right, thats what i want to ask you about because how does this change the balance of power in the region in a way that enhances american security, in other words, does this make it more likely that the u. S. Will not have to send troops in the region or act militarily . Is it actually going to bring more peace to the region or is it going set more tension on edge with iran and turkey . John no, i think particularly with respect to the iranian threat to the United States and all our allies in the middle east, paul, bringing together our most powerful ally in the middle east israel with the most powerful military and economy and Intelligence Service in the region together with some of our best and most capable allies in the gulf all under the cover of American Leadership and american organized coalition right to the doorstep of iran in the persian gulf i think creates enormous opportunities and synergies to further isolate iran and put further pressure on the iranians and put them into a corner that in a real strategic dilemma for them that makes them much in a much more defensive posture rather than on the office offense extending the region unopposed. Paul what changed, what broke the ice, if i can use the clicee about the middle east . John well, yes, important to remember that theres been a lot going on underneath the table for a number of years. The emirates, bahrains have had links and ties to israel but they were afraid to make them public because they were afraid of what the reaction would be amongst their own populations that have been sort of raised on a very heavy doze in doctrination of anti, antizionism and antiisrael. Whats good here that the Trump Administration launched the deal of the century back in february to solve the palestinian question, it led to the issue of israel possibly annexing up to 30 of the west and they saw an opportunity and get the United States to help freeze annexation and they then saw an opportunity that we can now rush forward and bring above board the full normalization of relationships with israel which the emirates and bahrains have known for years, the thing thats really going to help them serve their interest and meet the threats that they face in 21st century rather than continuing to be held hostage by a Palestinian Conflict that is that now looks as hard to solve as at any point over the over the last 8 decades. Paul well, the conventionalism had been that peace through the europe had to go through palestinians in land of peace deal in the wes bank and so on. This deal goes around the palestinians basically to get peace between the arap states and israel. Where does that leave the palestinians . Are they going to have to rethink the the policy of rejectionism that im afraid im sorry to say has dominated politics . John that would be the rational thing to do and one can hope that the palestinians come to their senses and come to the table and begin a serious negotiation with israel and with the backing surely of the United States and and israel, arab neighbors. If history is our guide the palestinians are going to continue to reject, continue to be marginalized and prospects for successful palestinian state in the future like they have in the past but for the rest of the region and the United States this really does paradigm that everything has to go through the palestinians. Leaving the issue behind and pursuing own National Interest against common threats in the region. Paul all right, john hannah, thanks, the politics of middle east peace deal, the panel weighs in on how much President Trump credit is getting at home and how much he deserves ut with accident forgiveness allstate wont raise your rates just because of an accident, even if its your fault. Cut sonny. Was that good . Line the desert never lies. Isnt that what i said . No you were talking about allstate and insurance. I just. When i. Lets try again. Everybody back to one. Accident forgiveness from allstate. Click or call for a quote today. And still going for my best. Even though i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib. Not caused by a heart valve problem. So if theres a better treatment than warfarin, im reaching for that. Eliquis. Eliquis is proven to reduce stroke risk better than warfarin. Plus has significantly less major bleeding than warfarin. Eliquis is fdaapproved and has both. Whats next . Im on board. Dont stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. Eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. Dont take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. While taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. Seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. Eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. Tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. Ask your doctor about eliquis. And if your ability to afford. Your medication has changed, we want to help. We are here this afternoon to change the course of history after decades of division and conflict, we mark the dawn of a new middle east. Paul President Trump touting the peace deal between israel the uae and bay rain as the dawn of the new middle east while nancy pelosi called it a distraction from the coronavirus pandemic, so does the president deserve political credit for brokering the deal and is he likely to get it in this Election Year . We are back with dan henninger, marian ogrady and bill mcburn. Dan, how much credit the president and Jared Kushner who is Senior Adviser and soninlaw and was leader on this, how much credit do they get . Daniel they do get credit but not much from the Mainstream Media as we have been talking all week about this that if barack obama, or joe biden, cnn would be running on documentaries on the road to peace, parade on broadway. Thats not going to happen with donald trump. The more i think about this, paul, this deal would simply have never been done by any democrat. It is an article among the democrats that would have include recognition of the palestinians and palestinian state. Its an article of faith with them with the way say climate is an article of faith with them which brings up yet another issue, the fracking revolution that donald trump supported in the United States, put at risk middle east the middle Eastern Countries reliance on oil. They recognize that they were not able to sustain themselves and had to diversify and that opened a path to this agreement, all of that is the kind of transactional process that no democrat would have pursued so theyre not going to give President Trump any credit for what hes done. Paul bill, lets explore that a bit because the president did some things no other president was willing to do. He moved the embassy to tel aviv and realized the annexation of Golan Heights and he did a lot of things that everybody in the Foreign Policy establishment said if you do that, there will be war in the middle east. We dont have that, and so, i mean, i guess, what do you think . Does trump deserve the credit or should we be skeptical . Bill yeah, i agree with you and i agree with dan. The democrats would not have done this. This is considered unconventional and the embassy was recommended by congress decades ago and other president s promised to do it but it was just like a lot of things, empty gestures. Without taking anything away from Jared Kushner and the people involved in the deal, to me the greatest part of the deal was the Trump Administrations decision to say, we are not going to let the iranians and the palestinians hold us hostage against moving ahead in the middle east and in so doing they exposed one to have great myths that the Palestinian Conflict is at the heart. We know its not true. Its a shiitesunni conflict. They are not worried about israel. They are worried about iran and we put this in the open and predictions of doom and gloom and catastrophe, turns out that dealing with strength and working with your allies works. I mean, the palestinians and iranians are more isolated and you just compared that to a few years ago when john kerry was send pallets of cash to iranians and i think peace through strength is is a pretty good principle and i think the president deserves credit for moving the policy in that direction. Paul mary, is there a lesson here, maybe even for the president of the value of allies because the president really stuck with israel, he stuck with the saudis under pressure, for example, in the yemen war. He stuck with the saudis despite that a lot of americans in congress basically wanted to stop support there and that has paid off now in in these countries feeling confident of american support so they are more confident about that, they are willing to do this deal. Is there a lesson there for east asia and maybe europe . Marie the idea that you have to negotiate with government in order to find the solution, i was interested in the comments from the Emirates Foreign Ministry that said its the end of the logic that says there has to be a palestinian deal and new gulf states sit there and wait until its done and they basically said we are tired of waiting, we want to be part of the world going forward. We dont want to be part of the iranian world and i think by recognizing that, its not just the alliance with israel, but also recognizing that there are a lot of people in the middle east who dont want to be part of what has been going on for the last, you know, 25 years with this idea that you have to negotiate with these authoritarian regimes. Paul thank you, when we come back after weeks of pressure from coaches, players and even the president , the big ten conference has decided to play football. Our panel reacts next. I want to congratulate big ten football, its back. I called the commissioner a couple of weeks ago and we started really put august lot of pressure on frankly because there was no reason for it not to come back. Paul President Trump on wednesday praising the big tens decision to resume College Football next month. The congress announced in august that it would postpone the season over virus fears but after pressure from parents, coaches and mr. Trump, the conference has decided to play, but before stepping foot on the grid iron, student athletes, coaches and other Training Staff will need to undergo daily coronavirus testing and games will be played without fans as the league looks for ways to reduce the chance of an outbreak. We are back with dan henninger, bill mcgurn, and jason riley. Bill, i know as a golden domer, youre no fan of the big ten . Was this the right call . Bill right. Yeah, i think it was. My approach is i dont want to tell anyone else when they should open or not open, but i think that the real key is to try to open, you know, with some precautions following the advice to mitigate risks. I cant think of a group less amenable than collection of University President s but i think that the pressure from the other schools, like notre dame continuing and the acc having a season put pressure on them and they said the advance in medical protocols made this possible. President trump has been taking credit for this. The way i understand it, joe biden had run an ad saying, you know, Trump America on the sidelines showing empty football stadiums in the states and said lets get back in the came and that prodded the president to do it. Another name for the big ten is a big swing because the swing state schools in wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania and ohio are represented, so i just think in general we should wish people well when they take sensible steps to get life back to normal as normal as possible. Paul dan, what about the critics who say you know what, this is about the money, they are putting safety last and they want to resume so they can get tv contract and compete with the s fec . Daniel its part of college life. That raises the big issue. Colleges are open and they are closing and going offline because students are testing positive. Look at the big ten rules, if a Football Player tests positive, they have to quarantine for 21 days. If 5 of the team tests positive, they have to stop practice for 7 days. For companies skeptical a little bit that this is going to come off, sounds like the ohio state coach woody hayes strategy. We will see if it works. Paul jason, i know that youre a longtime suffering Buffalo Bills fan, you saw the nfl opening last week i thought pretty successfully and college the colleges can open as well. You think this is are you a skeptical as dan of of how this will go . Jason i think its the right move. I think it was a brilliant political move as bill pointed out, these are swing states in the big ten. I noticed now he wants to do pack 12 but that will come secondly because you have california, oregon state and they are not as important as swing states but its also presenting a choice. I think this is the other reason its political move. Opening up the football youre talk about opening the economy, jobs, advertisers, marketing. Its part of that and trump was saying to the american people, are you going to be with me in getting back, our lives back and your kids lives back going or are we going do what the democrats do what they want to do power fear until this pandemic goes away. I think this is a brilliant move from the president. This is not a vulnerable group, vulnerable demographic when it comes to covid and people in the Age Group Get it and tend to be okay. I dont see that much downside here. Paul the message is we have to learn to live with the virus and this is one way to live with it, bring back sports. We have to take one more break. When we come back hits and misses of the week. Crankypated a bad mood related to a sluggish gut. Miralax is different. It works naturally with the water in your body to unblock your gut. Free your gut, and your mood will follow. Paul time now for hits and misses of the week. Jason, first to you. Paul, this is a hit for bruce roth who is the judge in lancaster, pennsylvania, who threw several antipolice protesters in jail and set bail at 1 million. Now, he later reduced it, but only after they had spent a few days behind bars. One of the reasons that i think these violent protests continue is because people think theyll just get a slap on the wrist, if that, if they get caught. I think if more judge withs behaved like this one dud, you might see fewer people acting that way. Paul mary . This is a miss for jay powell and the Federal Reserve which announced this past week that it will keep Interest Rates near zero for the next three years. Now, thats quite a forecast coming from the fed which has trouble forecasting Economic Growth from quarter to quart. Hue to quarter. Humility is a virtue and nowhere more than at a central bank. Unfortunately, its also very scarce at central banks. Paul all right. Bill . A miss to the minneapolis city council. You cant make this up. After george floyd died at the hands of minneapolis police, the city Council Voted to disband the police. This week they had a hearing on police reform, and instead of reporting how happily things have under thed the out, they started complaining about the rise in assaults, arson, robbery, murders. And theyre saying, the Council Members are saying theyre getting calls from their constituents, where are the police . More people have been killed in the first nine months of this year than all of last year. This goes under the category of be careful what you can wish for. Paul dan. A miss to the king of misses, new york city mayor bill de blasio. The city is a mess, and the mayor said he will furlough himself for a week in october along with about 500 members of his staff, saving the city a million dollars, just a little bit short of the 9 billion deficit. Some of us wish the mayor would furlough himself until the end of his term, 15 months from now. Paul all right. Thanks to my panel and thanks to all of you for of watching. Im paul gigot, hope to see you right here next week. Eric our nation mourning and honoring a giant of jurisprudence as we remember the life and legacy of Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. After serving 27 years on the nations highest court, the cultural and feminist icon died yesterday at her home in washington d. C. She was surrounded but her family. The justice was 87 years old. This is americas news headquarters. Hello, everyone, im eric shawn. Hi, arkansas this. Arthel hi, eric. Im arthel neville. Justice ginsburg is remembered for