well-deserved credit from voters who want authentic leadership, they want candidates who will be honest with them. back in the new york congressional, the special election, you know, the same old scare tactics didn t work. you had a republican win in a district that s been democratic for 80 to 90 years. geraldine fer arrow s district. democrats spent half a million dollars on tv in the last week and it didn t work. the same old scare tactics didn t work. i think voters are looking for authentic, honest leadership. and governor, finally, one piece of washington business. with all of the disaster relief that states are looking for in the northeast, you ve certainly had your experience dealing with fema. there s been a movement afoot to try to, as fema money gets approved, as more money gets thrown into fema to deal with these natural disasters, a search for offset budget offsets now, a change, frankly. some republican governors, including governor christie of new jersey saying, hey,
limit. the former house majority leader is with us now and it is funny to see geithner talking about the bailout of the auto companies when we want to stop spending or increase the debt limit. what do you make of it? guest: well, my biggest disappointment in geithner is he knows better. the market would have cleared up the mess that was handled with tarp so much more efficiently and it is a lot of the taxpayers money down the drain. this government has to get control of money and no one should necessity that better better than geithner because he is the last person to buy bonds for further government debt and he has to understand when the principle purchaser of newly issued bonds is the federal reserve that is the expansion of money that gives you inflation.
with us today at a press conference and i appreciate so much we all work together on a state and a federal level, on the local level, we all work together, and so i m going to ask to come to the microphone and speak, first, senator shelby and we re happy to have him back in his hometown like it is mine, and, then, senator sessions, we will ask him to speak and then the director of fema, also. senator shelby? thank you. thank you, governor. that is a live news conference and senator shelby taking the microphone. more coming up on fox news
floodplain. we can enter into a mitigation project and by doing that we can reduce future disaster damages. so you take federal money, fema money, and offer the people a price for their house. how does it work? are people normally, they have chosen to live there, are they receptive? guest: in some cases they are. the important thing is it is voluntary program, on the part of the homeowner and on the part of the local government that is the owner of the property if the project guess through. so, there is no one forced to sell their home and no one is forced to buy their home. the program starts with declared disasters. when we have a disaster it is declared by the president for all the grant dollars to come to the state of illinois a percentage of those can go to hazard mitigation so when we have a disaster we take advantage of that opportunity to
thank you for your time, craig. amber, let me just play devil s advocate here. first of all, not all these women are necessarily being trafficked by pimps. i assume some of them are doing it on their own to make ma money. is it the job of craigslist to police every single ad that they have? anderson, lately it hasn t been a question of whether it s their job to police this. it s a question of what they re saying they re doing. and ceo jim buckmaster s blog he repeatedly states that they re manually screening these ads, that if they suspect any ads are for minors that they ll immediately report them to law enforcement. as you saw, the head of the d.c. child sex trafficking unit says they ve never been contacted by craigslist. if you look also at the legal side under the communications decency act, craigslist is not legally responsible for the content that users publish on its site. that s another thing lawmakers are hoping will be reviewed. interesting.