was he said he talked to a guy who has been a friend. in fact, the new york times tracked down and discovered that tom-sean hannity said once on his radio show when introducing michael cohen, a long-time night of the inauguration, long-time friend of mine who has known me long before the campaign ever got started. brian: i know, too, it makes total sense. if you have a lawyer and you are trying to buy something and get to be friendly with that. how many times do we have the judge on the couch and say something to the judge, hey, judge, what s going on with this or ainsley owns a lot of real estate in new york city. moist of the buildings she owns. you might throw a question out legally do i have a standing here? steve: sure. every time we will do a tax segment we will ask the tax person can i deduct ammo? and apparently it sounds like sean regarded their relationship as something like that. somebody he had known for years and occasionally ask
trump s mantra on health care seems to be what it is with his budget, this idea whether they can do more or the same with less. pretty unrealistic. already you can see that as you go to your tax person, you don t have to necessarily pay a fine if you don t have if you didn t have health insurance. the funding source for this is already drying up, and the things they re talking about, like tax credits for folks, that doesn t help you on the front end if you have to buy, you know, health insurance or need health care. it seems like older people might have to pay more. if young people are in the system any more. they keep talking about access and freedom. freedom to buy, access to buy, but if you don t have the money, you are not going to have that access or freedom to buy. with all these policy questions, and that s just some of them, we could sit here for a week actually going through them, and it s so important. how does the process work here? as you jump in on the process, some co
you do that, and then separately, have a separate solution for the inner city. jenna: will you come back on the show, sir? i m going to have to go to commercial and i might need a chalk board to go over this! i m not a tax person. but we d love for you to come back to talk about the empowerment zones and factually exactly what they are and how they affect key parts of our country. real quick, only 30 seconds, is your plan to assume a certain level of employment to be fully functioning? so are you way the plan is going to work? well, what will happen economically is the economy will expand by $2 trillion, six million jobs are going to be created brepging the up employment bringing the unemployment rate back town down to a more typical rate. waging are going to go up by 10%, so there s jenna: so that s, that s what you re assuming will happen with the plan. all right, we d love to have you
of the company calls these sheister rates, which is defined as someone who acts in a disreputable way. the american tax person? that s how they thank us? that s not right. nancy, they re not selling the city of detroit. it s a wonderful city. what you need to do is sell cars and pay the taxpayers back and keep the government the heck out of private business. to have an italian company based in detroit, at least you can use the ad to sell cars. look at the debate we re having now. look at the buzz we re getting. megyn: what do you make of the c.e.o. s comments? they want to refinance the loan. they re paying 11% to 12% interest rates. megyn: those rates are high, but they had no other choice.
businesses are very small. they can be one person. they can be five people, ten. and so when we re passing laws up here that maybe a large corporation, they can hire a new accountant. they can hire a new tax person. a small business, it can be success or failure. we always have to be in consideration what we do here affects a lot of small businesses. because when it comes to small business, it is not one size fits all. thank you so much for stopping by and chatting with us. we hope to see you again next year. thank you very much, jj. nine years ago we met a woman named maishi. she s an entrepreneur who built a large candle business doing it all herself. we kept in touch with her over the years and i wanted to revisit her story to chronicle her next chapter. now she s doing something brand new. she s growing a lifestyle brand and working with licensors to