sorry. no, she s saying, i haven t seen it yet, either, but she s saying she s sorry for her decision to use no. well, let s just say this, i haven t seen it, but it s got to be really exciting. i mean, it s sort of like finally turning a page, right? right? turning a page. build the campaign, move up. it s got to be massive. that s huge. it s got to be like the end of, like, a dramatic movie. i don t know. i would think so. i finally, i think it ll be great. turn the page. like the end of this movie. alex, do you have a movie? oh, hello, mr. bank examiner. i know, $8,000. i ll bet it s a warrant for my arrest. something like this, mike barnicle where you wait for 3 1/2 hours and get a massive payoff. that s why we buy the tickets, walk out of the theater
exist. the question is, is there a generation where too many people are not having that inspirational moment. i mean, i grew up in the world war ii generation. there s a reason why that generation my father had an eighth-grade education. he left work because he was overfanned. he became a bank examiner. we had a house in the suburbs. i was part of a whole generation in the 50s that moved up together. why? there was full employment in world war ii, there was the g.i. bill of rights, an income tax that was passed. there was a sense of commitment at that point to bringing that generation going. that s eroded. it started eroding in the 70s and the 80s for the middle class and the poverty. it doesn t mean you always have these wonderful people that come up, but how many people with talent are not being realized? lincoln used to haunted about a person of a poem who had great talent and was in an unmarked grave because he never had that chance. all those realities are true. very qu
generation where too many people are not having that inspirational moment. i mean, i grew up in the world war ii generation. there s a reason why that generation my father had an eighth-grade education. he left work because he was overfanned. he became a bank examiner. we had a house in the suburbs. i was part of a whole generation in the 50s that moved up together. why? there was full employment in world war ii, there was the g.i. bill of rights, an income tax that was passed. there was a sense of commitment at that point to bringing that generation going. that s eroded. it started eroding in the 70s and the 80s for the middle class and the poverty. it doesn t mean you always have these wonderful people that come up, but how many people with talent are not being realized? lincoln used to haunted about a person of a poem who had great talent and was in an unmarked grave because he never had that chance. all those realities are true. very quickly, think that as you hear dr. k
ethnicities. we re really tolerant compared to other countries. and we still have these fantastic stories. i just had lunch with a woman from a not great family, she s homeless, decides she s going to enlist in the navy. the enlistment officer said, no, you shouldn t enlist in the navy, you should go to annapolis. she graduates this year. number one academically in her class, gets a rhodes scholarship, runs track, she s a marine. you run across these stories all the time and they still are endemic to the way we live. there s no question that those inspiring stories still exist. the question is, is there a generation where too many people are not having that inspirational moment. i mean, i grew up in the world war ii generation. there s a reason why that generation my father had an eighth-grade education. he left work because he was orphaned. he became a bank examiner. we had a house in the suburbs. i was part of a whole generation in the 50s that moved up together. why? there was
red for. after mr. hot tub organized the las vegas retreat from workers from the general services administration that cost taxpayers almost $1 million. and now treasury. greg jarrett is live in our new york city newsroom. the treasury department. what did they have going on? well, you know what, shep? hooking up with hookers has never been easier. it s just a click away while you are crunching numbers over at the treasury department. one employee there surfed the web for erotic services every single week, soliciting ladies of the night during the day. whispering sweet nothings into their ears and setting up sexual rendezvouses. when the guy got busted the case was sent to the u.s. attorney who refused to prosecute even though it s criminal behavior on your taxpayer dime. and then there is the case of the golfing bank examiner. this bank examiner was on inspection of this bank, and while during the workweek he