service. it s free if you walk in. they have no mechanism to take money. i have been to hospitals and they take if you and get you treated straight away. i think the healthcare here is better if you can afford it. but i still have a lot of fondness of it. i don t think people need to be terrified of it. megyn: even though some employees don t like the. what is the market telling us tell us? i don t want to go too deep in the woods. the issue is we don t know what the administrative costs are and we don t have any cost controls. so when you talk about predictability, the government made these extrapolations and they are favorable extrapolations. the market may say it s much different much like when president bush put in the prescription drug plan. that cost wildly more than we expected it to.
job, which i think we have done, and i m not saying that we ignore people that say there s some potential litigation risk, we need to do that cost benefit analysis. but we need to keep our eye on the ball, put these rules and regulations in place to help consumers and help markets and help our economy. bart, katrina has a question for you. commissioner chiltoc, some oil analysts in talking to them they will tell you at least half of the spike in oil prices is due to speculation. the cftc is overseeing that involved with that matter. could you speak a little bit about the issue of speculation and rising oil prices? i can speak longer than we have about it. give us a 60-second version. i will. based upon a goldman sachs research report, i talked about this a couple of days ago. they acknowledge that speculation equals an increase in prices. i ve done some extrapolations. it adds 39 billion dollars to
project any image anywhere at any time is real today? yeah. well, i would say a lot of it is in the near future what we tried limit ourselves to are things that are lineal extrapolations of technologies that exist today. for example, the kitchen, you know, with the interaction with the grandmother and all the things happen october kitchen, the cook, stuff like that could you probably do that now, just that it would be very, very expensive. some of the other effects it is a matter of some dogged engineering over time and a lot of cooperation in the value change to make these things both real and affordable and a few of the effects are actually really, really tough. for example that 3-d, where the screen, you know, comes right out of the wall, that s that s going to take a while to get. i would say somewhere between five years and never. five years and never? listen, here is what i m expecting, into the my
oil dissipated so you ve got to ask was it worth it? charlotte asked a question earlier that maybe you can answer which is if they didn t have any data for all this time, they don t know where the oil is, don t know what the flow rate s.oh, my goodness, it s 5,000, oh, my goodness it s a million. where do they come up with this data that charlotte is supposed to put as fact just because the government put it out when just three days ago they didn t have a clue what s going on? who you did that happen? that s the other thing about this report is the only data that they have, that is, measurements that they made from samples, is about the oil that was skimmed, burned or chemically dispersed. all the rest of this numbers in here are extrapolations from models they are running. if you read the report they have got something called oil budget calculator which is a big excel spreadsheet and they are punching numbers in that and getting numbers out the other end but most of the numbers ar
taking advertising liberties with abraham lincoln is nothing new. for a century and a half politicians and others have been crediting him with words he never said and popular culture has used his likeness for comedic effect. in all manner of wacky situations. take abraham lincoln from bill and ted s excellent adventure, told students to be excellent to each other. and the ax battling blood suckers from the trailer for abraham lincoln, vampire hunter. those, of course, were plausible extrapolations of lincoln. you should see what a tear partier in alabama has tried to turn him into. earlier this month he released a web video in which he lectures actors dressed as founding fathers about our current tyrannical government. and the ad ends with a declaration from the guy in the $4 george washington wig to gather your armies. today mr. barber is out with a new ad featuring a conversation