Customers. They bring opportunities to suppliers and the economy grows. Now that it is challenged within boardrooms, ceos from 181 of the nations largest and most influential companies, jp morgan, amazon, apple, walmart, general orders and Fox Corporation signed a statement saying that responsibilities beyond profit for investors. Their responsibilities also include supporting their communities, protecting the environment, prospering inclusion and training for workers. Is this an attack it on free marketing within . Or is it a case of Business Leaders adapting to a changing world under real threats workers feel from technology into trade and the risks the environment faces, shifting climate . Should ceos themselves put skin in the game by accepting less pay to address rising inequality . Well explore these issues in the next halfhour. A professor of economics at Harvard University and a nobel prize in economics in 2016. Professor park, thank you for joining us. I wanted to start out ta
Republicans, 2027488001. Independents, 2027488002. You can post on twitter at cspanwj and you can also post on our Facebook Page at facebook. Com cspan. Money needed to run for a campaign, the website investor pdf investipedia provides historical context. 192 million dollars, 300 million in inflationadjusted dollars. George w. Bush spent 345 million, which at the time was the most Expensive Campaign in history. President obama spent 775. 4 285on and the dnc added million, making the total spent to reelect the president 985 million. Then it goes forward to 2016, adding that at the time, many estimates for the president ial election said it would cost 3 billion and some put it at 10 billion. Just to the cost of running a campaign. To the length, a story in 2016 on how campaigning became a two year event. It goes back to the time of john f. Kennedy saying he announced his candidacy january 2 1960. 11 months later between martha h march 8 and june 20 iowa move the caucuses to january in pa
Check out all of the cspan products. Go to cspanstore. Org. Check out all of the cspan products. Host we are back with peter canellos, editoratlarge with politico and we talk about his story, are americans falling out of love with their landmarks . Good morning. Guest good morning. Host why did you decide to write this article . Guest i was shocked when i heard about the very persistent since the colonials got their first taste of history there. Visitors ship is about half of what it was in the late 80s. You look at somebody someplace like gettysburg, an amazing sight, americas greatest clash, the High Water Mark of the confederacy and turning born of the civil war point of the civil war. It is down about a quarter of what it was in the 1970s. These are surprising statistics. When a collie photographer bought it to our attention, we decided to do a photo essay and to also kind of meditate on what it is that has decreased our interest in these Historic Sites. With, from back talking to
Immigrants . David researchers say they discovered a new blood test that could accurately predict alzheimers 20 years before the disease sets in. What would you do if you were driving down the road and saw this. Thats not a drone. Its a real plane. Trish regan primetime begins right now. All side pointing to a bombing economy. Employers adding 164,000 jobs in july. Consider this. This has to be the party thats not afraid to say we are going to tax the hell out of the wealthy. David joining me now, jenna ellis, along with former white house advisor under president clinton, doug schoen. Happy friday. Doug, even the Washington Post, the liberal Washington Post came out with a lead editorial today talking about grounding visions. You have to you ground visions. And a lot of the democrats they say did not do that in the debates this week. They talk about proposals that should meet a baseline degree of factual [applause] built. A bar the medicare for all plan does not reach. Do you agree . W
To have actual images of when i give a talk. This is something of a departure for me. Heres how the structure is going to work. Im going to give very brief introductions for the four people who are sitting here at the table with me and ill do all of them at once. And then im going to go in the order in which these images are going to appear and have each of our Panel Members talk about why they decided to be part of this project. And why they selected the image that they selected. Theyll talk for a little while about the image and then well see where the conversation goes after that. Youll be able to have questions. Let me introduce everybody up here. Ill start with carol riordan, the professor of American History at penn state university. Carol and i taught together there for a long time. Shes the author of a very important book on civil war memory, the military side of it. With a sword in one hand, the problem of military thought in the civil war north. And shes a coauthor with tom v