crowds of protesters to send on that neighborhood chanting outside his home. and several demonstrations around the country turned violent this weekend following this up in court s decision to overturn roe v wade. a story of a tiny baby in tennessee born with serious heart trouble being denied a transplant allegedly based solely on his vaccination status . here to talk about the struggle of the little boy. we begin with that amtrak derailment in missouri. the very latest tonight. amtrak says going from los angeles to chicago derailed monday afternoon. it hit a dump truck blocking a public crossing. the missouri state highway patrol estimates 207 passengers on board as well as 14 crewmembers. estimates up to 50 people were hurt. video and pictures show that chaos after the crash, some of the train cars flipped on their side, passengers crawling out o them. listen to some people describe the terrifying experience. you heard a loud noise, and thought no, we hit something.
as i argue for in losing my dignity, it s not all that uncommon. but we have been told, we told to try to get something from the hospital. this mother had a ton of praise from the hospital in the people taking care of the baby my understanding of the situation is there was an entire list of vaccinations the doctor wanted the baby to have it wasn t just covid, but covid was on the lis in order to give the baby the best chance for success and survival, but the parents felt like they were being strong-armed, they said they have a religious conviction and felt they should be granted an exception based on that in medical concerns they have for the baby as well. i can t imagine being a parent cuts and the middle of this trying to make a decision you think is the best one to save your child. i mean, the stress alone would be enough that s what i talk about with my bioethics students all the time. let s say the doctor is on the
to save $67 billion, or cut $67 billion, but still increasing spending every year. this is what people don t understand. the baseline is we we are assuming that spending growth goes up 8% a year every year for eight years. yeah. it s amazing, isn t it? what s really sad about this, is if we if we tried to make the cuts that we ahead toed, that were needed, everybody in congress would say, no, no, no, those are drastic cuts. but those are things this is increases. nobody thinks we should be increasing spending right now. we re broke! sean: but all of these issues get demagogued, all of them. yeah. sean: what you put in place, is congress can decide how they want to cut. they can cut this program 15%, this program 10%, even increase spending in another program, but if they don t do it it s across-the-board bottom line. that s right. sean: you got to live within your means. that s the trigger in all this, is if you do not if the congress fails to act and make the req
golmer he would support it. your mack penny plan is? really simple. for six years, we cut 1% of spending for six years. sean: wait. we freeze the 2011 levels? that s right. sean: $3.6 trillion? we freeze it at that level. take 1% for six years. sean: one pen out of every dollar? one penny out of every dollar. this isn t a big lift, and washington can do it. then we cap spending to 18% of gdp in the seventh year. in the eighth year, the budget is balanced, and after 10 years we cut $7.5 trillion. all of this talk about the cuts, the supposed cuts that happened in this last bill that passed, those aren t cuts. those are fantasy cuts, reductions in the rate of growth. everyone knows if you continue to spend $1.6 trillion more than you bring in, you have to borrow that money, it adds to the debt.
golmer he would support it. your mack penny plan is? really simple. for six years, we cut 1% of spending for six years. sean: wait. we freeze the 2011 levels? that s right. sean: $3.6 trillion? we freeze it at that level. take 1% for six years. sean: one pen out of every dollar? one penny out of every dollar. this isn t a big lift, and washington can do it. then we cap spending to 18% of gdp in the seventh year. in the eighth year, the budget is balanced, and after 10 years we cut $7.5 trillion. all of this talk about the cuts, the supposed cuts that happened in this last bill that passed, those aren t cuts. those are fantasy cuts, reductions in the rate of growth. everyone knows if you continue to spend $1.6 trillion more than you bring in, you have to borrow that money, it adds to the debt.