Well break down the numbers in a little while. Lets start with iran. It is officially a violation of the nuclear deal that struck with six countries and the European Union exceeding the limit on how muffin low and rich uranium it could produce. This news comes more than a year after President Trump announced the United States would exit the Multi Lateral agreement. Lets look at why it matters. Natural uranium coming from mines had less than 1 of the isotope. U now, one of the most efficient way to do that is to spin the uranium at super sonic speed allowing u235 to separate out from the rest. This is called enriched uranium and it is used to depend on the level of enrichment. Enriching uranium between 20 and 93 allowed it to be used in research reactor. Once it is enriched to 90 or more. It is suitable for use in Nuclear Weapons. What we are talking about iran here in the left of your screen, low and enrich uranium. It is power and reactor uranium. The Iran Nuclear Deal known as the jc
First a little about me. As a 30year branding and marketing veteran and consulting to president ial campaigns and former business associate of potus for 20 years im here to shed some strategic light during those next 542 days. Im going to bring in some thought leaders inside and outside of politics to break down the key strategic questions and challenges as we head into 2020. To my left is the great Nicolle Wallace. Now, you know nicolle obviously, i think shes become one of the most political voices of our time. People stop me on the street, is she as nice as she seems, and say yes. I just got off the phone with w, off the phone with the attorney general, the most plugged in, but you break it down in such a real way. And i think you are truly the most beloved host on this network, and the reason youre here is youre a friend and you have to come on and help me out. I never would have had a first show if you werent one of my friends and champions. Thats not true. Really cool to be here.
single payer universal health care, people in skands nave ya used to the programs the democrats are running on but republicans are determined they made it clear here to claim that any version of socialism even the soft democratic version we have in canada is going to lead the u.s. down the road to venezuela or the soviet union. you ve heard the word venezuela a ton here, they re going to steal your hamburgers and make you eat dog food. it s been dark and apocalyptic. don t tell anyone there about social security and medicare it s going to blow their minds. has there been talk about the cohen testimony that you ve heard? there has been a little bit, but only to mock michael cohen. they ve talked about it in passing. they don t want to talk about it and this is their forum and they re on stage and can talk about whatever they want. socialism, knocking the mueller investigation, illegal immigration. this is not a place where anyone is compelling them to talk about cohen. what we ve
set up a single-payer system. there are some people who proposed in the past medicare for all. that essentially is what s called a single-payer plan. and a lot of countries have single-payer plans. i have to tell you that politically it would have been difficult and it would have been very disruptive. whatever the politics that ultimately made it too difficult and disruptive at the national level in the president s estimation, vermont thinks that at the state level they are perfectly happy to do it. it s essentially medicare for all. one of the architects of the modern medicare program designed a plan for vermont that he says will save the state at least $580 million a year. in a state like vermont that is a lot of money. and by alleviating the burden of rising healthcare costs and taking that burden in particular off of businesses they think it will probably create 4,000 vermont jobs. the bill passed by the vermont house by a nearly 2-1 margin last week. it s now being debated in
moving ahead with an actual idea, moving ahead in concrete ways on their own ideas for how to deal with healthcare. one of them is oregon, which has some complicated ideas about negotiating healthcare costs that would hopefully lower them, a long-standing goal of oregon. the other state, which is steaming full speed ahead on its project with no one really paying any substantial attention to them while they do it, it s the great state of vermont. and what is vermont doing? vermont with its democratic governor and its democratic controlled house and its democratic controlled senate. do you want to know what vermont is doing? single payer. do not tell any conservatives you know about this. they are going to freak out. i happen to be a proponent of single-payer universal health care. [ applause ] that s what i d like to see. but as all of you know, we may not get there immediately because first we ve got to take back the white house and we ve got to take back the senate and we ve got to