substantive things, they re not reading e-mails, to extent anything was going on has nothing to do with what we think of as communications. people had the analogy it was the next watergate. watergate involved people breaking in trying to go through filing cabinets. when you look at the analogy here, if you want to call it watergate it is that the security guard while being paid to do security, observing who was coming in and that person was then paid to send the information to somebody else. it doesn t mean they were asking what they were there for, it doesn t mean they were going through their briefcases, it doesn t mean they were going through the files they were bringing in. that s the correct analogy if you are going to use the watergate analogy that has been thrown around so often about it. if you are doing dns lookup it is not possible to dig into the heart of the communications. nobody in this particular instance according to durham s own words it is not possible for somebody
intellectuals and peanut butter sandwiches in their briefcases, these people do not live like you. i was living in illinois and we were by no means a family of george wallace. the part of it did ring a little bit true was decisions that affected your life are being made in new york and being made in washington, d.c. we knew to a large extent they were not made in illinois. michael beschloss, thump. i think george s these is fascinating. joe biden has a theory of the case of how to fix this. the theory of the case is start at home, deal with covid, get the economy growing fast and these terrible problems of inequality and unfairness anger will begin to resolve themselves. i am curious to ask george whether he think that theory,
why not require vaccine mandate? if you want to get rid of covid? it s a great question. it appears that most companies are moving in that direction. certainly large companies that don t want to take the financial hit from having people get it essentially a potential disability from long covid or short briefcases of covid. it does feel like it s a political issue. joe, i talked with the ceo of columbia sportswear, they have branches in 97 countries. it s quite amazing that this is the only country that has this problem. where does it lead us? it brings us back to the politics of it. i spoke with the ceo and mississippi, he says it s not like i have not tried, guys. i have given them incentive and a day off to get vaccinated. i am about 30%, help me out here, i don t know what i am going to do about this testing regiment now because i am afraid
happening after hours here. there were zero young people. there were no families. trying to get a restaurant to eat at after hours, there was nothing down here. from a lifestyle perspective, this was strictly the financial district. brown loafers and briefcases coming in at 7:00, leaving at 5:00, nothing happening on weekends. even after, when they were trying to figure out what they were going to build here, they also realized the risk of having one industry so concentrated. we were talking earlier, i spoke to howard at fitzgerald, and dozens of financial firms were wiped out. before 9/11, half of the people working in lower manhattan worked in finance. now it s less than a third. look at what this area is now. it s young families, parks, a performing arts center is being built. it s transformed into a different really one of the brightest spots of new york. you can come spend a weekend day here, hang around.
talking to them in a language that they hadn t heard before, at least out in the public. and as george described, she started something that we re still reckoning with here today. i think you re absolutely right, willie. and nicole will be delighted to be reminded of her role in the sarah palin rise i m waiting for a text from her right now. exactly. with smoke coming off of your iphone, i assume. exactly. but it was visceral. and there is a visceral tradition in american politics. that s what george wallace was talking about in the 1960s, when he was talking about the pointy-headed intellectuals. and the bureaucrats with peanut butter sandwiches in their briefcases. he was saying, these people do not live like you. and i can remember a little bit, i was a little kid, but i was living in illinois, and we were by no means, our family, george wallacites, but the part that did ring a little bit true was decisions that affect your life