generous? that number just has a funny ring to it, $5.7 billion. i think we need to look at the real needs and make the dollar decisions based on the needs. you don t do it the other way around, you don t decide a dollar figure and then fill in the blapgs how wiblanks how wil work. they want to provide a basis for a possible negotiation for the shut down and a reasonable one. we ll meet you more than halfway. we just won t build the wall. are you comfortable with the decision to uninvite the president to the house chamber. i am because of separation of powers here. no one has a right to come to the house of representatives and speak. they do that by invitation and the house chamber is controlled by the speaker.
in short order, i was pretty much told by my dad and mom that they didn t need my help anymore and i don t foe whethknow wheth animosity because i d gotten close to their dad. after a particularly ugly fight with his dad, pete was exiled from the land of plenty. moved north of this eden into town. and started a landscaping business. my wife and i had nothing, i mean, when i say nothing, i mean nothing to do with the moores. and paul, paul remained a family golden boy. his doting grandmother made sure he never went without. paul married a local beauty. this is his wedding video. he waited for the day when he d reign over the land. but he was never involved in the big questions, when and what to sow, when to reap. those multimillion dollar decisions were left up to
to collect the data this week. the labor department s methodology is to collect the data by phone, by person and by survey each month the week after the so-called reference week, and that reference week is the day that the 12th the week that the 12th day of the month falls in. so the reference week for october was last week. the data collection week is this week. so this delay means that policymakers will be making important, multibillion dollar decisions on the part of taxpayers that impact the economy but with less information about the economy. in. certainly, right now the economic data is as important as it ever is. there are a lot of policy decisions going on not only at the federal level, but the state and local level. the state is really important. and something that i think is underappreciated, it really is used directly by businesses and
dollar to nearly $50 million. the shareholders said, no, we don t want that. however their vote is nonbinding. meaning the company doesn t even need to follow it. that s right. jenna: is this regulation or this, this right to do this by the shareholders really something that can be a game-changer for some of these banks or is it just kind of lip service right now? well, first of all, jenna, you are exactly right in most cases these votes are nonbinding on the corporate board, but you know what? they ignore what the shareholders start saying at their own peril. these are shareholders sending a signal, jenna. by the way the shareholders are owners of the company. so they should have some say in what the executive compensation is. but on the other hand, jenna, there is a real opportunity for kind of grandstanding here. as i said earlier, look, if a corporate ceo is making the right kinds of decisions and by the way they re making billion dollar decisions that have enormous impact on w