don t believe it. check it out yourself on realtor.com. so, you know, the story, for decades the biggest employer in braddock was manufacturing. something called the edgar thompson steelworks. in fact, andrew carnegie. the plants closed, and there was unemployment and people left by the thousands. one man saw an opportunity in braddock, pennsylvania, not an opportunity for the town, but for himself. that man s name was john fetorman. he was 35 years old, never in his life had a real job. getterman was not from braddock. he spent his life going to business school, then to harvard for a so-called masters of public policy, which for the uninitiated is an utterly meaningless document that you pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to get in order to tell people that you went to harvard. in fetterman s case, his dad paid for it, and paid for everything else. for a long stretch, deep into his 40s, his income came from his family. in other words, john fetterman was a classic trustfori
car garage right in the middle , of town for three thousand00 dollars. don t believe it.realto check it out yourself. for unreal true.com. so you know the story. man for decades,uf the biggestthing employer in braddockca was manufacturing something called the edgar thompson steelworks. in fact, andrew carnegie steelwt it there along with his first stone public library, which still stands so for generations, braddock, pennsylvania, was a real place and then inevitably a steel plant closed and the usualrnegie disasters arrived. unemployment, hopelessness, drugs. people left by the thousands. but one man saw an opportunity br in braddock, pennsylvania, not an opportunityt an for the town but an opportunity for himself. that man s s name was john fetterman. fetterman was thirty five years old and had never in his life had a real job.job. geteran was not from braddock, hardly. he grew up ittn an affluent neighborhood four hours away. fetterman had spent his adulte life going t
past years during the covid pandemic, which was totally real. this week we heard the phrase again. leaders in europe are bringing back the phrase flatten the curve, but this time they re not talking about covid. something bigger is going on. here s the president of the european commission, announcing that europe must flatten the curve, but not for covid. watch this. this is expensive. we have to flatten the curve and avoid the peak demands. we propose a mandatory target for reducing electricity use at peak hours, and we will work very closely with the member states to achieve this. tucker: oh, so we have to flatten the curve, because you screwed up and we don t have enough energy now. how long before the climate lockdowns? let s say that again. how long before the climate
to quote a phrase, cool beyond words, pretty cool your home and make sure that that thermostat s seventy eight degrees still feels cool beyond words. i walked in at seven , eight degrees and felt like i needed a jacket because the distinction between the elements outside and inside record heat. he s cool. even in record , tucker. he certainly is . trace gallagher, great to see you . now, you think a normal leader would say if you ran a state, for example, you re president of a country, you would say, i can t keep the power on . i m sorry. that was like a fundamental part of the bargain i made with you. the people who voted for me when you did vote for me, that i would keep the lights on . but they never apologized. they blame you . don t use your dryer. okay, pal. stop using your dryer. how s that sound? so you remember back to covid when the leaders, the world told us that our natural rights, the ones we were born with , we re going to have to be suspended. we had to do this t
Clay Travis and Buck Sexton mocked the European Commission president after she warned Europe may need to take action to 'flatten the curve' to fight against the growing energy crisis.