Anything and i have nothing to add to that. Because that seems absolutely positively correct the fed will keep rates unchanged and possibly have a message that they are kind of encouraging inflation to go higher one of the most important statements that i think has gotten less play than it should is jay powell said in late october we would have to see rise inflation persistent to consider raising Interest Rates to fight inflation so the fed wants inflation to be higher actually. And theyve contextualized this by saying 2 was our target for many years and we fell short and now we need to fill the gap of which makes no sense to me whatsoever i think it is cover for wanting Interest Rates to basically be below the inflation rate which is the game planner for central bangs and developed countries really around the world and so now we have the tenyear treasury yield and the core cpi is up higher than 2 and yet the Interest Rates are kept below that so foed knows that we have a det roche in
reporting to special counsel jack smith will square off in front of a three-judge pam of the court of appeals for the d.c. circuit. at issue whether trump has immunity for conduct he undertook as president or cannot otherwise face prosecution because it would represent double jeopardy. that s the legal issue. but what s most important here is the timing. trial court judge has determined she can t move forward until this issue is resolved. she entered an order on december 13 saying trump s appeal automatically stays any further proceedings that would otherwise move the case toward trial. but that stay could be lifted after the outcome of tuesday s argument. for sure, the losing side is going to appeal to the supreme court after perhaps first asking for the first court of the appellate court to hear the matter on bond. the losing party has 90 days to ask for supreme court review. as i detailed before, smith is eager to get trump tried before the election. trump, on the other ha
Braun, latinn american historian here at the university of texas. It gives me great pleasure to have read these papers and now meet the gentleman who have written these papers. I worked on the 1960s. I see certain similarities and what is going on in the 1960s with that which transpired between the United States and latin america in the 1980s as well any papers. What we would like to do is i contestantsce the excuse me, the presenters. We are going to have the two papers on Central America first. Then we will turn our attention to south america because it is two different things. South america is dealing with the end of military governments, longterm military governments. Then there is this act of newly installed leftist revolution in nicaragua that will take up our attention. We will do that first. Then we will follow along with on southn the america. Thatis interesting here is we have papers that are based upon u. S. Sources and also based upon sources from latin america itself. We g
15842069, whats it all about . Neil well, generations is a whole new way of looking at how the past shapes the future. Our book retells the entire story of america from the perspective of separate generations moving through time. We follow each of these generations from childhood to old age, starting with the first puritan colonists and going through the small children of today. Along the way we discovered some outstanding patterns in history that seemed to be recurring in the appearance of generations. We found, for instance, that every generation belongs to one of four lifecycle types that seems to repeat in the same order over time. The appearance of young war heroes is almost always followed by the appearance of a young generation that appears indecisive and conformist to others. The appearance in history of passionate, young moralists is always followed by a generation which appears wild and uneducated to elders. So, what we do is take these patterns and try to use them to show am
Youre watching American History tv, all weekend, every weekend on cspan3. To join the conversation, like at cspan ook, history. Next on history bookshelves, from 1991, coauthors neil howe and William Strauss sit down with cspans brian lamb to discuss their book, generations the history of americas future 15842069. Beginning with the puritans, the authors divide americans into 18 generations and distinguish four types of generations that they argue repeat in cycles, which can be used to ai