game a little bit. it ups the stakes for the sondland testimony. the only person here that i think at this point we really need to hear from is sondland. he talked to the president are, he knows what happened, he was in the middle of this. even yovanovitch on friday, who by the way i found very compelling and i m a big fan of our career foreign service officers, she admitted she didn t have a lot of information jermaine to the actual inquiry. sondland s the key. if i were him, i d be nervous as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs. he s on thin ice and he needs to tell the truth because there s a lot of folks that witnessed some of the activities he was involved in. i d like to get your opinion, mayor galen, about whether you think enough has been shown to the american people to actually move public opinion. yeah, well first, i think we have to acknowledge that the presentation by ambassador yovanovitch was compelling from every single angle. most people don t really
rather, a far third from those two issues. neil: what does it say? it says that we believe that interest rates are going to be extraordinarily low for an extraordina extraordinarily long period of time. i think we ve entered a period where the rates are so low, everyone is going to have to all the books and manuals out there are going to have to be rewritten. as long it s that low, we can service this debt. to jonas point, and eventually trillions a year and take us off the cliff. neil: and can you tell us when? you and i will be in our rocking chairs, or maybe eating a little bird with blind folds on. in germany you have to pay for the privilege of loaning the government your money, right? if you re buying government debt, i mean, even if ours looks not as great as under clinton, it s still the large saving grace is in the world of dwarfs, we re the tallest.
they were running for office or gaining active in politics. he s in the right place on the issues. i m not sure he s the right messenger. i say this as a new yorker who loves mike bloomberg. watching him yesterday, he had this air of i ll be happy if i can just change the debate a little bit and include these things. he was talking act joe and i are going to have a great year. it was almost like we re going to sit in our rocking chairs on the porch. you ate your wheaties this morning. i don t know. let me ask you this. and don t get mad at me for bringing this up. axios talks about one of the biggest political stories since the rise of president trump has been this fever pitch discussion, the sudden stark sustained rise of aoc and beto. with the fact that she s not old enough to run for president, a new poll shows 57% of democrats
it was just over the legal limit. he wasn t that intoxicated. huh-uh. what do you think, tony? do you think it was intentional? i really struggle with that. i just don t know. it s one of the things i need to know. to find answers, connie has convinced tony to take a giant leap into the unknown. give me five, give me five, thank you. later this week, they re headed to upstate new york, to a place called lilydale. it looks like something out of a storybook, rows of old houses, tall trees, rocking chairs. they re echos from the victorian era, when a group of women heard noises they claim came from beyond the grave. victorian era.
not that intoxicated? no. what do you think, tony? do you think it was intentional? i really struggle with that. i just don t know. it s one of the things i need to know. to find answers, connie has convinced tony to take a giant leap into the unknown. give me five, give me five, thank you. later this week, they re headed to upstate new york, to a place called lilydale. it looks like something out of a storybook, rows of old house, tall trees, rocking chairs. they re echos from the vick yorian era, when a group of women heard noises they claim