Problem. How do you respond to that sentence . Ill start with mr. Horowitz. I can only speak from experience and what ive heard from other igs, which is we have faced road blocks in several of our reviews, untimely access. Where we have gotten it, it has taken a fair amount of time. I think the other igs have had their experiences. I know from conversations with fellow igs, while they havent had lawyers come forward and say we cant legally give it to you, theyve had issues with getting materials in a timely manner. That is a very significant issue for us. So when it says, almost uniformly successful, how would you characterize what youre able to access and get right now, particularly from the fbi . It has been an extraordinarily difficult issue for us for now several years to get prompt, timely access to materials. Mr. Elkins . I think theres a disconnect. And i think that statement that you just read capsulizes the disconnect. On the one hand, i think what we have seen here is that we
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he makes the case that it is still a driving force in politics. then the carnegie endowment for international peace. he will talk about iran and if there s anything the u.n. or u.s. can do about it. do not forget that we want to get our campaign coverage which will look toward the convention. i would advise you to go to c- span.org and find out what we re going to do there. a countdown to convention, republicans will take place august 27-30. democrats will take place september 4-6. the can find that out on c- span.org and c-span radio appeared in a few moments we will hear from paul ryan radio. in a few moments we ll hear from paul ryan. he will address issues of medicare specifically. we will take you to that program starting shortly. we pledge our allegiance to this country, don t we? this is not the first time that people go to political rallies. this must be the most important election in the history of our country. when my father served in the navy, this was a feel
coolidge have to do a lot with what we are facing today. [applause] thank you very much. i have one question and then the moderators prerogative i think, and that is a that the u.s., we are the most productive country on earth from what i understand and in that basically means we do more for less. the criticism is often made that companies are making all this profit that they but they are not hiring anybody. where the most productive country and we don t need all those people. so can you just sort this out for me? are we going to have to go through a whole generation before people start getting wealthy again and everyone is project if and what? can you help me out anyone? i would be much more optimistic than that. productivity growth since 1900 the u.s. has averaged 2% a year. we had a surge to around 4% of your during the information technology revolution and that matt was talking about but it s really surprising, if you go back and look at the historical statistics in t