almost like on autopilot. that is what we have here. bill: but the politicians don t touch this stuff because it is outside control of the budget. if you had a vote you could not do anything bit. i agree. politicians never touched fannie and freddie until it blew up and costs us a lot of money. that is where we re going. sound great, fannie and freddie, affordable homes for everybody. this sound good too, medical care for elderly and sick and people that can t afford it. the row to serfdom always begins with good intentions. when government is this much enmeshed in a program like this it always leads to disaster. bill: a couple things he fears coburn says, obamacare is next one to join the club of medicaid as we just pointed out. medicare, 16,750%. defense health programs, 1300%. veterans medical care, 4500%. all this now listen bill: got to pay for it, charlie. every time the government is involved in these programs they
about 35,000 hotel rooms less than two miles from where the convention itself would take place here at american airlines center because a common complaint among delegates in years past, long commutes from their accommodations to the convention space. plus, dallas would also like to benefit from the millions and millions of dollars this would bring in. it s a wonderful economic boost and thank goodness people are willing to contribute to the host committee to bring all the venues accessible and it will be good for dallas. reporter: between all the delegates and media, it is estimated about 40,000 people converge on a city for one of these conventions, martha. a lot. martha: yes, indeed they do. last time we were in tampa for that event which is a swing state, florida, dallas going after this because they are largely a red state?
so you have essentially got three parents in the mix of this baby potentially. richard, what do you think? well, listen, i got to tell you, obviously there is regulation there. i think it is good to see science working to sort of fix genetic ills, or wills i would be the right word here. we ll see what happens. this research shows how powerful science can be to make sure we have healthy babies in this something. i think it is start of something. we were talking about couple years ago in vitro fertilization, or ivf, people said it was horrible thing and now people are using to for a lot of families. we ll see what happens. martha: michael, many say it is slippery slope when you open up this door. we have mapped the human genome and potential to do these sorts of things is open-ended. the story resonates particularly here in boston because they re talking specifically about mitochondrial disorder and we have the horrible case of justine being abused by department of children and fami
request and records? a lot have surgery other places, died, don t live in the state, were here on a visit. there were reasons it is ridiculous. ridiculous. &%ale announcer ] .office space. yes, we re loving this communal seating. oh, it s great. yeah. [ male announcer ] the best thing to share? a data plan. new at&t mobile share value plans for business. our best value plans ever. for example, you can get 10 gigs of data to share. and 5 lines would be $175 a month. plus you can add a line anytime for $15 a month. sharing s never been better for business.
colonoscopy. there is a push in congress, we did this story, to allow more flexibility to fire executives at the va who some folks don t believe they are doing their job. where is that today and who decides whether or not an executive keeps their job? the secretary would decide that. it is called the veteran s manager countable act. jeff miller is carrying it in the house and marco rubio is carry it in the senate. there is a lot of support for this. how can you not support empowering the secretary to fire managers which is nearly impossible. who would be against that?