latino, the coverage rate is about 33%. so, you know, you have to look down at the micro-level to make sense of these numbers. it s not just politics but lots of different fablingters. before you go, biden announced he will be distributing 8 0 million doughs of vaccine for other countries. the administration under pressure in recent weeks to share unused doses, especially for vaccines not approved for use in the u.s. do you like this plan? is 80 million enough? 80 million isn t enough. it s a great start. your comment at the beginning that we re below a million doses a day here in the united states really says that we ve got some supply that could be made use around the world. whether you support it for humanitarian or ethical reasons or for self interest because transmission anywhere could allow for variants to develop and put everyone at risk. it s the rate thing to do. i hope over the next several months we see that number going way, way up. dr. richard beser, thank you so muc
i have good news for you. it s an asean initiative. one word that has not been mentioned is a book called the asean miracle. they played a very valuable geopolitical role by providing the only platform in the region where the great powers can talk to each other when they have difficulties like when china and japan to talk to them over there. i am actually very happy that president trump had to extend his day by one day to attend. it s not just about putin. it s about a region to the southeast where they have a huge reservoir and good will towards america. america has been investing in the region for a long time and has been doing the rate thing
permanent tax code. neil: but you have to give on something. either scale back some tax breaks that are popular today like for state local taxes. would you be open to that? the blueprint the house blue print puts a lot of those sacred cows on that table. neil: such as? state and local, for example. neil: such as charitable deductions? no, not neil: what about mortgage interest? too sacred. some but not others. you have to dial them up but not dial them back. as a threshold, we oughts not be walking away from pushing for a permanent tax code. we have american fiscal and tax policy is inverted. we have text tax policy and we have permanent spending policy. neil: so it sounds like the president wents to do this rate thing next week, still sounds
i think is should be deeply troubling to anyone who cherishes civil liberties in this country. better believe it should be deeply troubling. as we have been talking about meet with the wounded warrior project, soldiers ride. it s such a grate thing. not just for our country and the heroes themselves but also the president gets really into it. then later on he will leave for mar-a-lago after which he will have a chance to meet with the president of china. president xi jane king. we are told the first ladies will have time together. everyone wanting to know how strongly will the president continue his push to get a more ebility tillable trade relationship between the u.s. and china. we will be talking about that all day. for now, we we will toss it back to you guys. steve: susan rice story where she, the unmasker, had been ununmasked. where was it in the new york times. brian: page 16-a.
the small gains we have had the last few years. this is unfortunately where we are going to be. north of $300,000. martha: some of the study show when the unemployment runs out, people get jobs. they find work. it s true. study after study said that. what you have a lot that s gone on in america the last several years is fairness humanitarian type of argument masked as an economic argument. you can see you the rate thing to do, but on the other side of the coin is letting someone s skills erode for 3 or 4 years, you are helping them? ultimately you are not helping them. it sound mean spirited but the exact opposite has been proven to be right. martha: the gdp, 3.2%. bill: the number itself is not