Can. We also always put language in there, if something is not working, we can go back and revisit it and clean it up, and we do a lot of that as well. So, we do our best, we perfect know, we love input and the biggest problem we have sometimes with some of these policies and procedures, we dont get enough even though the staff do an amazing job, its hard to get peoples attention on everything, and the consequences of some of the decisions we made. But we can always reverse if we have to. Thank you. I would just say that i agree that any decisions we should have should be data driven. We still have a lot more of discovery to do around what data inputs we need, and again, these kind of forums, this type of report is just the beginning for us to start digging in deeper and i think again, many of the initiatives that we are already, we have already begun, our life lines council, this process, and then through the Emergency Management and expanding that is the direction we need to go in. B
The following move to the regulatory piece, i want to make one other comments. One thing i dont want to be losses why Companies Like ours and others support the information sharing legislation. Partly because to date when we try to stop the cyberthreat it requires lawyers to analyze a variety of statutes weather is electronic communications, determining what we can do so a big aspect of the information sharing that is not talked about as much is the actual authorization component of the legislation so specifically authorization for companies to do things like monitor their networks or take action to stop the attacks or in the last panel ryan asked a question about Liability Protection if you dont act on the threat. Those are critical aspect because that would provide clear Legal Framework notwithstanding information sharing its all the more Legal Framework under which we can apply and that an cybersecurity. A lot of the reasons we support this legislation is it clears up the legal over
160 points at the low of the session, and that was within the last hour or so. The s p down 16 and the nasdaq down 46 there. A lot of people watching the tenyear treasury yield as well, looking to that as they have for weeks now. Right. Kind of a broader reflected gauge of where we stand in the economy, where is this all headed and to what extent, if you look at the performance of these markets since the Federal Reserve meeting over the last eight sessions or so, thats really where youve seen the rotation from growth into value. How much does it have to do with the tapering and tightening if you want to call it that. A day that when they sell the stocks they buy the bonds because the yields on the long end of the curve have been come down today. Let talk about it and get to our closing bell exchange. Quincy crosby and anthony chan from chase, Michael Guyette from Pension Partners and winner, by the way, of the 2014 dell aware and samir samano and jim lacamp from ubs and Gordon Charlott
withdrew rather than even compete with cuccinelli in the convention that the cuccinelli backers called instead of a primary. everyone s saying, oh, if they had a primary, that would have solved their problem. no, actually, i think bowling would have lost to cuccinelli in a primary too. and that s it s the base of the republican party that matters today. and ryan, the primary process, right. that s the big question for chris christie. so chris christie wins among women. he wins significant support from latinos, african-americans. he gets democrats, 32, i think. but today in an interview with jake tapper, he says, i m a conservative, i ve governed as a conservative in this state, which is not quite i m severely conservative, but it s really interesting that the day after he s sort of widely hailed as a moderate, a centrist, he needs to go back and prove his conservatism. because now he s headed
of our family tree, although i don t know we come up with anything remotely as interesting or lyrical or compelling. amy tan. the book is the valley of amazement. thank you so much for joining us. thanks again for another great book. thank you. and thank you to my panel ryan, kathleen, and jacob. that s all for now. andrea mitchell reports with guest host kristen welker is coming up next. when our little girl was born, we got a subaru. it s where she said her first word. (little girl) no! saw her first day of school. (little girl) bye bye! made a best friend forever. the back seat of my subaru is where she grew up. what? (announcer) the subaru forester. (girl) what? (announcer) motor trend s two thousand fourteen sport utility of the year. love. it s what makes a subaru, a subaru. of their type 2 diabetes with non-insulin victoza®.