their jobs because of illegal things their employers were doing. and all that is in limbo until we can get nlrb folks confirmed. so we ve just had enough. we want to apply the pressure. we want to let minority leader mcconnell know that the american public isn t going to stand and take this. larry, if someone is if viewers are watching this right now and the nlrb sounds like an abstract body and a fight over nominees and no one knows the names of these nominees, who these people are, probably don t know this board exists or why it s important. what are the stakes for just average workers? why should i care that the nlrb has been rendered inoperable? so two categories. first you have 6 million workers like the employees at panera bread who are involved trying to have a voice at work, being able to bargain with their employers. there s 6 million workers covered who have bargaining rights by the board and by the regions of the board. not just the board in washington.
allowed to go on. it s reached a point where people s lives are being ruined because of it. there are workers similar to kathleen who have been awarded backpay and reinstatement in their jobs because of illegal things their employers were doing. and all that is in limbo until we can get nlrb folks confirmed. so we ve just had enough. we want to apply the pressure. we want to let minority leader mcconnell know that the american public isn t going to stand and take this. larry, if someone is if viewers are watching this right now and the nlrb sounds like an abstract body and a fight over nominees and no one knows the names of these nominees, who these people are, probably don t know this board exists or why it s important. what are the stakes for just average workers? why should i care that the nlrb has been rendered inoperable? so two categories. first you have 6 million workers
who know more about benghazi. greg: i think the feeling i get from this the administration and president obama isn t even sweating over benghazi. it shows you how they view the media in general. media is bait kli their wife that lets them stay out all night. this never worry about retribution. nobody is following up on this stuff is fox news and blogs. and perhaps the consulate had a parenthood chapter being attacked by pro-lifers, maybe somebody might have showed up. dana: this lawyer, victoria, they have knowledge just about the final stages but the way we talk about it on the if i have five. the actual evening of the attacks and then the cover-up. with the infamous video. they could have a lot of information that american public isn t getting.
greg: i think the feeling i get from this the administration and president obama isn t even sweating over benghazi. it shows you how they view the media in general. media is bait kli their wife that lets them stay out all night. this never worry about retribution. nobody is following up on this stuff is fox news and blogs. and perhaps the consulate had a parenthood chapter being attacked by pro-lifers, maybe somebody might have showed up. dana: this lawyer, victoria, they have knowledge just about the final stages but the way we talk about it on the if i have five. the actual evening of the attacks and then the cover-up. with the infamous video. they could have a lot of information that american public isn t getting. dana: have i victoria is
american public isn t aware of but should be aware of and should be concerned about? well, i think that the big places that are on on our radar right now have to be north korea. we re not paying as much attention to north korea as we should and iran, and those are countries that not only have the capacity to provoke, but they also have the capacity to imploerksd and because of iran being such an important energy player, both in terms of production but also in terms of transit and north korea, because of the importance of the economy around, it those are the two that you have to pay the most attention to. there are lots of questions, no question, in the middle east that are problematic, especially with the u.s. now leaving iraq. i think the dangers of sectarian conflict, taking what s been one of the most exciting investment stories in the middle east, iraq, and making it potentially much more divisive internally, that s the one that we re probably going to spend a lot more time pay