is striking as well. nothing could be more important than in this particularly moment than health care, yet we had two justices willing to demolish the aca. that is particularly striking. what does the supreme court s decision tell us about the security of the aca going forward on that central issue? so i think this is much debate. earlier today on msnbc are republicans going to reel it back, this is baked in and these entitlements will endure because people have expectations to them. i think that s probably right but we also said in 1992 after planned parenthood versus casey reaffirmed row versus wade. we saw that the port would chip, chip, chip away at the rights. it wasn t a full frontal attack on row but a gradual derail j.
he. it wasn t a state secret going into the g7, that the president had a dramatically different approach, different feeling about the alliances, about the value of the post-world war ii consensus and construct when compared to his predecessor donald trump. you showed that picture donald trump refused to sign the comm communique. president biden is pushing the group towards a communique that largely reflects his priorities going into the see how all of that went. if you want some signal to that, well, listen to how he framed things today.
president told them that, you know, we re behind you, but you buy all this stuff yourselves. and gretchen whitmer, the governor of michigan, told me she realized at that point that in her state, they didn t have enough ppe for the next shift. it wasn t a matter of weeks or something. they were out. and it was up to the governors to find a way to get all these supplies, and they were wound up competing with each other even sometimes when they secured those things, they were seized by the federal government. so, it was it was a it could be almost comical if it hadn t been so tragic, you know, the health workers many of them got ill and a number of them died. how many would have been saved had they had the ppe they needed? yeah. i ll tell you, lawrence wright, we described it as being potentially the definitive book. it is called the plague year
of the books you wanted to buy you would think it was a lousy website. it wasn t a website problem. it was that we were left with a shortage and we had to fix it. once we fixed the shortage we actually built tools, text lines, and other things for young people because we anticipated that the challenge wasn t going to be getting people to appointments. the challenge was going to be getting the next set of people to whom they weren t willing to go through all of the trouble to actually get to the system. that s where we started focusing our technology efforts. you were steered to the health care system when you were sitting there with her and trying to figure out how to pay those crushing bills, you helped them pay those bills he incurred on the way to his death, a physician who when he got that diagnosis only had five months to live. such a personal and tight and emotional connection to the gravity and to the grueling
neil: all right. you re not imagining it. home prices are going higher, the highest they ve ever been since way back in 2006 when george w. bush was president. a lot of people never thought it would come back. everybody was getting out of new york. everybody said new york was finish except one guy. you remember ryan from million dollar listing. the one thing i like, big money energy. that s out there right now. he s a force of nature. very optimistic. that has a lot to do with it. ryan, good to see you. good to see you. thanks for having me. neil: so let s talk about what is going on here. now, last time you and i chatted, it wasn t a matter of prices running up across the board.