Good afternoon, everyone. We are running a little bit behind today. On behalf of the American Enterprise institute i would like to welcome you with the conversation with pamela paul of the New York Times book review about her recent book how to raise a reader. She coauthored it with her colleague maria russo. So much about raising children is about what we dont want them to do, keep them dangers both real and virtual, no doubt this is a feature and bug of our helicoptering age with this attitude fails to promote a sense of independence in kids. Not only do they not know how to walk down the street by themselves but are incapable of entertaining themselves without a device in hand. For reasons both selfish, parents need a break, and selfless, we know this is an important life skill for them, the Current Situation is pretty untenable, our kids have trouble with any unstructured activity but reading for pleasure is the activity that has suffered the most. According to a recent analysis th
And virtual. No doubt this is a feature perhaps in our helicopter in age but i think this attitude often fails to promote a sense of independence and kids. They entertain themselves without a device in hand so for reasons both selfish and selfless we know this was an important life skill for them. Our kids have trouble reading for pleasure is perhaps the activity that has suffered the most i its fallen by 30 since 2004. If there is a way to reverse the trend, i think it will have to start with our children and i can think of no one who can help us better than pamela the Childrens Book editor at the New York Times is also the author of the book review podcast. She talks about the research and book for a little bit and she and i are going to have a conversation and then we will open up to conversations from the audience with that i will turn over to pamela. Im telling it for a reason. First of all this is something that happened my last time i came down for the National Book festival we
individual s names in this report. the bar associations across the country, local bar associations have to step up. local prosecutors have to step up the accountability piece is the piece here, and that is what folks will be looking for. we certainly will, symone thank you. if you are just joining us right now i m stephanie ruhle. it is midnight on the east coast and i am on the west coast, we are continuing our breaking news coverage of the release of the january 6th committee s final report on the siege of the capital and donald trump s effort to change the results of the 2020 election. it was made public just over an hour ago, it totals 845 pages. what is the first passage all about? the big lie. with that, let s get smarter with a lead off panel, former you new york prosecutor in civil rights attorney charles coleman. pulitzer prize-winning reporter for an joyce vance, who spent 25 years as a federal prosecutor and symone sanders-townsend still with us along with stua
that we have already seen to this. we cannot compare watergate, just this really was the beginning and the plot for what would ve been a civil war, a small version on january 6th. and that is laid out even in the first few pages of this document. from a legal standpoint, from a principled standpoint, it absolutely has to be taken seriously. it is not just an indictment on democracy, sorry an indictment on the republican party, it is as clear statement on how these people will go to any and many lengths to literally dismantle american democracy. and that is no laughing matter. katie, in 845-page report that is now sitting in the lap of the department of justice. jack smith, a report like this isn t like a pot potato that they now have to deal with or do they just get a winning lotto ticket? there are all sorts of details in this thing. i think based on in the summer over the election in the fall and now more recently the subpoena sent out to the fake electors plot i don
Hadnt snowed enough to create this mess. It definitely hammet rained enough. Everybody in the neighborhood has been complaining. Q this is the cold reality for the homeowners in southeast hill crest community. Drivers slowed to a creep. Some in reverse. Walkers inch across the street. Cane in hand. You fell down on this ice . Yeah. Right over on that of the road. Aaron smith is 83 years old. Overnight the city workers put out the cones, the road signs and dropped a heaping helping of salt. But the residents have seen it before. They tell 7 on your side it is a matter of time before the salt dissolves and the ice is back. They have been dealing with this for two winters now. The water comes out every day. Q the weather coming from the alley between 34th and 36th place and street for two blocks. They are not doing anything with it. So we dont have enemies of doing it. Someone has to be responsible for it. Here is another live look at the ice and all the running water. Big question now is