concern, and i m into the point of worry. i don t know that. but what i do know is that unless we start talking to each other we are not going to solve our problems. we have very significant problems. and calling somebody problems. calling somebody a name is not the way to have a productive conversation. we need to be civil. people don t have that modeled for them in the universities, outside the universities. there was the whole 2017 punching a nazi. we need to move away from that and toward talking to each other. we re all americans. we all have ecological concerns, concerns with of tpoverty, with homelessness, with guns. it sounds like a fascinating read. certainly a book that we should be reading right now in these times. it is one of the most devastating environmental
talk radio, right? rush limbaugh, you know, rush limbaugh s start in radio came at the end of the reagan era. he kind of rode ronald reagan to his success. so i think people like ronald reagan, people like sean hannity, who calls himself a reagan kid. they re emotionally invested in reagan s success, too. so they re the ones who call out candidates who break from the orthodoxy and can cause somebody problems with those primary voters. will bunch, senior writer at the philadelphia daily news, the author of tear down this myth: how the reagan legacy has distorted our truth and haunt our future. you wrote that book a few years ago, it s going to get more and more important towards the course of 2016. thanks so much. thanks, rachel. appreciate it. all right, why the size of alaska, the enormous physical size of the place, may wind up mattering a lot for the national elections this year. it s a weird story out of alaska that i don t think anybody realizes the national implications
at the end of the reagan era. he kind of rode ronald reagan to his success. so i think people like ronald reagan, people like sean hannity, who calls himself a reagan kid. they re emotionally invested in reagan s success, too. so they re the ones who call out candidates who break from the orthodoxy and can cause somebody problems with those primary voters. will bunch, senior writer at the philadelphia daily news, the author of tear down this myth: how the reagan legacy has distorted our truth and haunt our future. you wrote that book a few years ago, it s going to get more and more important towards the course of 2016. thanks so much. thanks, rachel. appreciate it. all right, why the size of alaska, the enormous physical size of the place, may wind up mattering a lot for the national elections this year. it s a weird story out of alaska that i don t think anybody realizes the national implications of, but we ve got that coming up. stay with us.
going to speak ill of the king, or whether or not we ve actually created enough pseudo organic enthusiasm for the are reagan legacy, that for example, republican primary voters might punish somebody that didn t toe the line. right, well, who are the enforcers in the republican party? the enforcers, by and large, are talk radio, right? rush limbaugh, you know, rush limbaugh s start in radio came at the end of the reagan era. he kind of rode ronald reagan to his success. so i think people like ronald reagan, people like sean hannity, who calls himself a reagan kid. they re emotionally invested in reagan s success, too. so they re the ones who call out candidates who break from the orthodoxy and can cause somebody problems with those primary voters. will bunch, senior writer at the philadelphia daily news, the author of tear down this myth: how the reagan legacy has distorted our truth and haunt our future. you wrote that book a few years ago, it s going to get more and more impor