Thank you so very much for coming. My name is Arthur Milikh. Im the executive director of the Claremont Institute center for the american way of life here in washington, dc. The right has gone through, lets say, three phases over the past ten years. First, it was laughter at the left, laughing, thinking that this or that policy, this or that outrage can be solved just with laughter that steadily turned in to a kind of hopelessness. One saw how pervasive everything was that . We were laughing at, and the hopelessness led to a kind of dejection that has only been rehabilitated. And i think that thats what everybody this room shares, which is a new a renewed a new seriousness that i havent seen in my lifetime. Im about engaging in politics, in a way that isnt just about marketing and advertising, but is about owning the that were partly here to discuss to celebrate is a book that was put together by a lot of writers, some of whom are in this audience that maps out the rights errors over t
Thank you so very much for coming. My name is Arthur Milikh. Im the executive director of the Claremont Institute center for the american way of life here in washington, dc. The right has gone through, lets say, three phases over the past ten years. First, it was laughter at the left, laughing, thinking that this or that policy, this or that outrage can be solved just with laughter that steadily turned in to a kind of hopelessness. One saw how pervasive everything was that . We were laughing at, and the hopelessness led to a kind of dejection that has only been rehabilitated. And i think that thats what everybody this room shares, which is a new a renewed a new seriousness that i havent seen in my lifetime. Im about engaging in politics, in a way that isnt just about marketing and advertising, but is about owning the that were partly here to discuss to celebrate is a book that was put together by a lot of writers, some of whom are in this audience that maps out the rights errors over t
Thank you so very much for coming. My name is Arthur Milikh. Im the executive director of the Claremont Institute center for the american way of life here in washington, dc. The right has gone through, lets say, three phases over the past ten years. First, it was laughter at the left, laughing, thinking that this or that policy, this or that outrage can be solved just with laughter that steadily turned in to a kind of hopelessness. One saw how pervasive everything was that . We were laughing at, and the hopelessness led to a kind of dejection that has only been rehabilitated. And i think that thats what everybody this room shares, which is a new a renewed a new seriousness that i havent seen in my lifetime. Im about engaging in politics, in a way that isnt just about marketing and advertising, but is about owning the that were partly here to discuss to celebrate is a book that was put together by a lot of writers, some of whom are in this audience that maps out the rights errors over t
World. Ahead on cnn newsroom, crisis averted. Biden set to sign off on a deal to raise the federal borrowing limit. Heartbreak in india. Search efforts now underway after one of the deadliest Train Crashes in the countrys history. Plus, new video shows the moments before an iowa Apartment Building came crashing down. Live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom. The Debt Limit Crisis in washington is over for now, and perhaps no one is more relieved than u. S. President joe biden. In his words, crisis averted. The stakes were enormous, the threat of failure hung over the country for weeks as the white house and Republican Leaders seemed locked in stalemate. But the hard work finally paid off late thursday when the u. S. Senate voted to suspend the debt ceiling and avoid catastrophic default. In his First Oval Office address on friday night, the president summed up his view of the make or break moment in u. S. History. Passing this Budget Agreement was critical. The stakes could not have
Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you so very much for coming. My name is Arthur Milikh. Im the executive director of the Claremont Institute center for the american way of life here in washington, dc. The right has gone through, lets say, three phases over the past ten years. First, it was laughter at the left, laughing, thinking that this or that policy, this or that outrage can be solved just with laughter that steadily turned in to a kind of hopelessness. One saw how pervasive everything was that . We were laughing at, and the hopelessness led to a kind of dejection that has only been rehabilitated. And i think that thats what everybody this room shares, which is a new a renewed a new seriousness that i havent seen in my lifetime. Im about engaging in politics, in a way that isnt just about marketing and advertising, but is about owning the that were partly here to discuss to celebrate is a book that was put together by a lot of writers, some of whom are in this audience that maps ou