Minutes. Got to talk to peltz, jim, about Procter Gamble yeah. Big tory. David and i have been spending time on it. Mr. Peltz had came on here and then mr. Taylor, the ceo of procter came on mad money with a series of what i say are just outright charges that vehemently disagree in what was once i thought going to be a more gentlemanly discussion with what mr. Peltz is saying and what mr. Peltz has done. Would you agree with that . Yeah. I dont think its interesting. The battle has been joined here. Both sides had hoped to keep it civil. Its not clear to me thats case civil like a civil war. Thats fine with us why do we come back to it . P g is one of the most Important Companies in the country this is the first time weve seen a proxy fight even for one board seat in a company this large. Did depends on who you talk to if its a company that needs fixing, and not something capable of the Current Management Team regardless because of all the different layers, the bureaucracy, the units w
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In our world of electronic and digital communications, one wonders what evidence of our day-to-day lives will exist for our descendants in the next century. Modern technology has given us the ability to be in almost constant touch with one another. But, will our emails and texts still exist a hundred years from now? For decades, letter writing was often an everyday occurrence for most people. Keeping in touch meant sitting down with pen and paper. Receiving a letter was often an exciting event, especially from someone miles away. And, for many, including Alexander Graham Bell and his family, these letters were something to be kept, not simply discarded once read. The Bells were profuse writers and as a result, their story can be told today through thousands of letters.