has something to say and we wanted to give them more time to say it. they re an hour long with some of the most compels people in america. news anchors, lawmakers, people having thoughts we never thought of before. you may have seen a few minutes here on previous shows. tonight we re focusing on a few people. that would include j.p. sears, mike tyson and a man who treats people as they re dying. an end of life physician called christopher kerr. first we re going to look back at a conversation with someone that has passed, kirstie allie that died this fall of cancer. she was on our set and we had a remarkable conversation. here s part of us. for our viewers that know you well, this is to remind them why they like you so much. here it is. st. jerome s hospital. hey, slow down! the first stage of labor can take hours. yeah, so can midtown traffic. the wife of a plumber. we re going to have a bunch of little plumbers. and the horrible part is, he s too good for me. we
don t believe it. check it out yourself on realtor.com. so, you know, the story, for decades the biggest employer in braddock was manufacturing. something called the edgar thompson steelworks. in fact, andrew carnegie. the plants closed, and there was unemployment and people left by the thousands. one man saw an opportunity in braddock, pennsylvania, not an opportunity for the town, but for himself. that man s name was john fetorman. he was 35 years old, never in his life had a real job. getterman was not from braddock. he spent his life going to business school, then to harvard for a so-called masters of public policy, which for the uninitiated is an utterly meaningless document that you pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to get in order to tell people that you went to harvard. in fetterman s case, his dad paid for it, and paid for everything else. for a long stretch, deep into his 40s, his income came from his family. in other words, john fetterman was a classic trustfori
you see that every day. how ow many members of congress who voted to expand the police powers od tof the irs don t payn their own taxes? more than a few. w how many politicians sup who fervently support gun control have armed bodyguardst o that you pay for? well, let s see.r? every single one we could go on and on and on. whatever they re demanding thato you do this week, you can be dead certain they are notbe doing it themselves. everyone notices us . it enrages people, but it s often misinterpreted people say. this is hypocrisy, but it sit sp not. it s privilegrivileged.e. when nancy pelosi walks into her hair a point without a mask at the height of the covid, no lockdown s, it s not because she forgot to bring a mask. noe fo, she knows exactly whate she s doing. nancy pelosi is affirming her position iorder.n social order. nancy pelosi is in charge. you are not. nancy pelosi can do whatever she cares to do.ca you can res to dt. that s the messages is she s sending an
a landmark climate and health care law. democrats sided with the american people, and every single republican in the congress sided with the special interests. democrats say it s good policy, but with inflation historically high, how much will it matter in november. and mow ron desantis game the commanding general of the culture wars. we must weight the woke in our schools. we must fight the woke in our pizs. the state of florida is where woke goes to die. as he campaigns for maga candidates across the country will republican voters be willing to pitch trump for him? inside politics, the biggest stories sourced by the best reporters now. hello, and welcome to inside politics sunday, i m abby phillip, with the midterm primary season just about over donald trump has succeeded in defeating nearly every republican who openly opposed him. liz cheney s blowout loss is the exclamation point, the fourth republican who voted to beat trump, and to lose their primary.
despite the biden administration really trying to do what they can on inflation, another key measure of inflation shows how high it is soaring. the producer price index which measures the prices paid to producers of goods and services jumped 11.3% year over year in june. this is all after what we pay for things, showed inflation at a 40-year high. the white house says congress has to pick up some of the slack. some of the most significant steps we can do right now are things he needs to partner with capitol hill on. there are steps congress could take to reduce some of the big tickets facing families and that legislation has been languishing over there. joining me now is the chief u.s. economist and managing director of fs investments. thanks for the time and good morning. good morning. so let s begin where the white house just left off there. they are saying there s more we can do. one thing is a gas tax holiday. there was a piece that highlighted carter administrati