suggests a post covid that we are still no better at containing an outbreak. tonight with the context, rebecca harding, trent economist, and the former communications director for the and the former communications directorfor the donald and the former communications director for the donald trump campaign brian lanza. a warm welcome to the programme. there is nothing british people love more than discussing the weather but thatis more than discussing the weather but that is because it is highly changeable. we do not often discussed the weather with concern or maybe a sense of dread about where the climate is heading and we re certainly not used it a0 celsius. 0ur roads and railways were not built for it and neither our homes. we are notjust setting records this week, we are smashing them and we are doing it at an alarmingly regular interval. it should concern us as it is concerning the french and spaniards. they are used to hot temperatures but right now there are wildfires bu
country and believed in the services. well, now they have a tough time recruiting people. why? people don t want to join a woke military but one with integrity, a military that has its eye on the ball and when you know you are pursuing a common mission that we can all be proud of. we need to restore that in this country and we ll get to doing that very soon when we take office. [applause] we also have to restore integrity to our constitutional system. the founding fathers designed a system with three branches of government, legislative, executive, judicial. they did not design a fourth branch of government an administrative bureaucracies that takes matters into its own hands. some of the most important policy decisions are made not through your elected representatives, but by nameless, faceless bureaucrats in washington, d.c. that is economic and social
administration when she s president and she says thee wants to be the small business president. small business will have a huge seat at the table in a hillary clinton administration. dennis, i would like to ask you the same question. yeah, i think you re right, j.j. a lot of us out here in fly-over country, as we seem to be called, feel like we have no voice in washington. we feel like the rules and regulations are being made by a bunch of nameless, faceless bureaucrats, and they really have put a huge burden in regulations and taxes and a lot of other issues on small businesses with, it seems to us, no feedback from what s going on out here. the new rules on overtime are a great example. that came out of nowhere and are really shaking up the small business world. and i think that donald trump comes out of the business background. he understands, he understands delegating, he understands listening. i think he s done a great job of listening to us as his small business advisory coun
are not created by people who we ve elected. they re not created by congress. many of our laws are issued through regulations that are created by a bunch of bureaucrats, nameless, faceless bureaucrats in american agencies. they don t care about the american people. their number one priority is their government agency and job. ta to me is frightening. that s scary. let me bring this to john. what happens when you have a federal government that says marijuana is illegal and then states like colorado, washington, who say marijuana is legal or drinking ages or speed limits. you know, it gets a little confusing out here. well, i think it does. there s a lot of confusion in the law, eric, and a lot of bad laws passed because they don t actually respect government s function which is to protect individual rights, not pass laws and try to control its citizens. this is the land of the free. government should do a little bit to try to keep it that way. and wayne, what about it? if it goes
sometimes only four members of congress have access to this information, sometimes they include the speaker and minority leader. i think that is too few. asking every member of the congress to keep it quiet, probably too much to ask, but we do need more oversight. right now i don t think we actually know everything about this program. i don t think members of congress are being told the truth now. regardless of what we know is a big problem, its warning sign that we don t exercise enough control by our elected officials over these unelected faceless bureaucrats. gregg: part of the problem so much is classified. mike rogers too much and overclassified, i think. mike rogers who heads the intel committee that th program has disrupted major