A little bit about the speaker. We are excited tode have chris derose. We just got the call last week so we are thrilled that he took time away to reach out to us for his appearance. But he is a New York Times best selling author for the starspangled scandal. Former senior litigation counsel to the Arizona Attorney general. They constitutional and International Law and clerk of superior court for americas fourthlargest county maricopa. On the board of directors of the Abraham Lincoln association and the board of scholarly advisers toto president lincolns cottag. He and his wife reside in phoenixgh. Without further introduction, i present to you, chris derose. And i am reading and to be absolutely focused as the country teetered toward civil war. But then i was doing Research Going down that rabbit hole. And so in did one indeed he did go to Lafayette Square. United states attorney for the Nations Capital and one of most prestigious and important families. So to set all of this in motio
Largest developed nations were having problems with the boys were falling behind girls and all of the academic subjects but especially in reading and writing. Reading and writing other biggest predictors of success that i start seeing is a something bigger going on . Whats the cause of this . And why is it developed nations . I saw that developed nations had enough master of survival to be able to allow permission for families to have divorces and for women to raise children without much father involvement or any father involvement. So i started looking at those populations and found that when there were divorces, children didnt do much worse, but children that had almost no father involvement or no father involvement did much worse. They were where the boy crisis resides. When it went over to the single mother groups and found the same thing was true there. Really understood that while there about ten causes of the boy crisis, that the single biggest cause was that the boy crisis resi
Girls. And so i started seeing that, ultimately, in the 14 years of research i did for the boy crisis that there were about 56 of the largest developed nations were having problems where the boyses were falling behind girls in all of the academic subjects but especially in reading and writing. Reading and writing are the two biggest predicters of success. So i started saying is there something bigger going on here and whats the cause of in the, and is there any why is it developed nations . And i saw that developed nations had enough mastery of survival to be able to allow permission for a family to have divorces and for women to raise children without much father involvement or any father involvement. And so i started looking at those populations and found that when there were divorces, children did do much worse, but children that a had almost no father involved or no father involvement did much worse. They were part of they were where the boy crisis resides. Then i went over to sing
Of history and comparative american studies at oberlin college. We are glad to claim her as one of our own, receiving her ph. D. From uv. She will speak on i wore the uniform of blue making the case for africanamerican enlistment. I have the very difficult task of going after gary. I would like to thank you for inviting me and for will for for all of my traveling snafus and being so gracious. And to thank liz, whos my former adviser, and Gary Gallagher, whos also a dear mentor of mine, for not only having me here at the conference but also for years and years of mentoring that dont seem to end. Im going to talk about im going to begin with the battle that gary does not think is important. Because it is in North Carolina. To be fair, i dont think many people think that the battle of new bern is incredibly important or significant, so i dont think hes alone. Nor am i arguing that the western theater is more important than the eastern theater. I just want to throw my hands up and say that
Table more or less. At this point, weve pushed that back to june. And, you know, i guess what i would say is, i think the risk to our forecast would be skewed towards later. That is, i would say the probability of july is higher than than, you know, may. For more on the fed and the economy is bloombergs reade pickert, who has had some time to digest the data all morning. And if you had to read through all the conflicting signs were seeing, which is the biggest conundrum to you. So, you know, really what we saw in the ppi report was price pressures that were driven from the goods side. So a lot of that was gasoline. But there was a big pop in food as well. And so when we think about where inflation goes from here, were not getting a lot of help from the good side of the economy anymore. So in cpi we also saw that core goods inflation rose after a series of outright declines in deflation. So in terms of thinking about where were going from here, you know, were trying to kind of fed offic