start to understand that it is a business first before it is a game and you see guys in and out of organizations all the time and so these players know that they do have a short window. i think one point, too, to also mention is that these players have been in the forefront of working with members of congress, they ve been speaking to state attorney generals, they ve been going on police ride alongs and so they ve been doing this for years. that work is not or that work is going to continue, it s not going to stop. jamil, you know, the irony is that republicans who have been very vocal about free speech on campuses, being very angry when conservative speakers are tossed off, you had ran na romney mcdaniel the head of the rnc cheering this policy and saying she s glad to see it and at the same time two days before that talking about the thought police in silicon valley being mean to diamond and silk. a lot of irony there. yes, i think free speech is, i guess, where you find it whe
ran na, first, what is the most important thing that americans need to know about how their tax bill, filing, changes in the new year? what s the most significant change for most american families? well, you know, across the board, the middle classes will see a very small decrease in taxes probably, but it s going to be less than 2% of their pre-tax pay. it s really going to be minuscule. richer people will see a lot more of a break. corporations will see the biggest break. the big difference, of course, is that the individual tax cuts will expire where the corporate tax cuts will not and i m worried that s going to create a bigger wealth gap between wall street and main street. i want the first bill in congress in 2018 to make the middle class tax cuts permanent. there would be a bipartisan consensus for that. one other quick point, there s 26.5 million small businesses in this country. we talk about the corporate tax cut but those 26.5 million small businesses will get a tax cut
action, to stop iran. i think it s important to start on the cost of not acting to stop iran na world in which the ayatollahs would have atomic bombs, i think that would be catastrophic. greta: do you have a sense that other nations have that sense of seriousness that you have about this issue? or do you think many nations think we can talk our wiout of this, eighths bit? i think they would like it see iran agree to the dismantling nuclear program. they are trying to pressure them to do that. the pressure hasn t been applied. the economic sanctions hurt iran, economically, no question about that. but so far, it hasn t these sanctions haven t achieved the one goal they have, which is to make iran stop their nuclear weapons program. greta: do you have any doubt they have a nuclear weapons program? god, i said yesterday, what do you think iran is doing all of this developing these underground halls with thousands
action, to stop iran. i think it s important to start on the cost of not acting to stop iran na world in which the ayatollahs would have atomic bombs, i think that would be catastrophic. greta: do you have a sense that other nations have that sense of seriousness that you have about this issue? or do you think many nations think we can talk our wiout of this, eighths bit? i think they would like it see iran agree to the dismantling nuclear program. they are trying to pressure them to do that. the pressure hasn t been applied. the economic sanctions hurt iran, economically, no question about that. but so far, it hasn t these sanctions haven t achieved the one goal they have, which is to make iran stop their nuclear weapons program. greta: do you have any doubt they have a nuclear weapons program? god, i said yesterday, what do you think iran is doing all of this developing these