it s tough to really worry about retirement right now because i know it s so far off, and i know that worrying and stressing over it is an easy thing to do. but i m also of the mindset that as long as i don t have too many bills or anything, too many debts, then i could essentially live off of whatever i get. i guess plan b would be to keep working, but i m really banking on plan a. otherwise, yeah, no, i don t have a plan b. it s hard to imagine even at this point in my life being retired. i just don t see it. you know, living the american dream of having your house and being able to retire. nobody has a pension anymore. it wasn t like it was in the 60s or 70s where people worked for, you know, good companies and had a pension plan. i think that s a harsh reality for a lot of people. i do think that we ll be working until. (sighs) we ll definitely be working until our probably mid-70s, if i had to make a. unless we can make up some big ground soon. (engine revving) y
it s tough to really worry about retirement right now because i know it s so far off, and i know that worrying and stressing over it is an easy thing to do. but i m also of the mindset that as long as i don t have too many bills or anything, too many debts, then i could essentially live off of whatever i get. i guess plan b would be to keep working, but i m really banking on plan a. otherwise, yeah, no, i don t have a plan b. it s hard to imagine even at this point in my life being retired. i just don t see it. you know, living the american dream of having your house and being able to retire. nobody has a pension anymore. it wasn t like it was in the 60s or 70s where people worked for, you know, good companies and had a pension plan. i think that s a harsh reality for a lot of people. i do think that we ll be working until. (sighs) we ll definitely be working until our probably mid-70s, if i had to make a. unless we can make up some big ground soon. (engine revving) y
there are holdouts among the urban bi-coastal elite. but i think we ve won the debate with the american people in the heartland, the people who get their hands dirty, people who dig up stuff, grow stuff and make stuff for a living, people who have a closer relationship to tangible reality, to stuff. we need to keep banging away on the science. hockenberry: myron ebell chairs a group called the cooler heads coalition, one of a team of skilled policy advocates driving a remarkable turnaround that has already changed the u.s. political landscape. warming isn t, in fact, accelerating. in fact, there s been none for 15 years. hockenberry: there s christopher monckton, a big draw at these meetings, who brings the skeptics to their feet every time. god bless america. hockenberry: republican congressman james sensenbrenner of wisconsin, vice chairman of the use science committee. paul krugman accused my colleagues and me of treason against the planet. (laughter) hocke
there are holdouts among the urban bi-coastal elite. but i think we ve won the debate with the american people in the heartland, the people who get their hands dirty, people who dig up stuff, grow stuff and make stuff for a living, people who have a closer relationship to tangible reality, to stuff. we need to keep banging away on the science. hockenberry: myron ebell chairs a group called the cooler heads coalition, one of a team of skilled policy advocates driving a remarkable turnaround that has already changed the u.s. political landscape. warming isn t, in fact, accelerating. in fact, there s been none for 15 years. hockenberry: there s christopher monckton, a big draw at these meetings, who brings the skeptics to their feet every time. god bless america. hockenberry: republican congressman james sensenbrenner of wisconsin, vice chairman of the use science committee. paul krugman accused my colleagues and me of treason against the planet. (laughter) hocke
we probably can begin to understand adam. and in our second story, a town divided over guns. when they pass a law that violates the constitution, i will not comply. and how the shootings have moved grieving newtown residents to join the debate. you have a tremendous power. and the fact that you re from newtown is even more important. we cannot be defined as a culture that accepts this. things must change. this is the time. these two stories in this special edition frontline. frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major support for frontline is provided by the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more information is available at macfound.org. additional funding is provided by the park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues. and by the frontline journalism fund,