paul: the debate over masks and vaccine mandates heating up as millions of american schoolchildren are set to return to the classroom governor abbott being sued on his ban on mask mandates that he does not have the authority to stop them from requiring masks on campuses as california governor newsom says the teachers and other school employees must be vaccinated against covid-19 or submit to regular testing. the first state to implement such a requirement. we are back with kim stossel and wall street journal editorial board member alisha kinley. and t4 what about the brawl between joe biden and that you republican governors of texas and florida? i guess they are as well with their localities quick. on the joe biden friends this is convenient it was a
our columnist and editorial board member kyle peterson. so the feds mantra the biden administration that this is transitory it has on - it s going to fade away are you seeing any signs that it is or will we see this for a while? there are no signs that housing prices are up 10 percent in 182 of 183 areas measured. that does not sound transitory. this is a classic clash between democratic demand side policies and those of us that you have to attend to the supply side so this is a lot of constraints on supply through the supply chain not being able to produce product there were some policy things that joe biden did such as a 300-dollar insurance on - uninsurance bonus and that is with the stimulus spending
by the biden administration, and what was removed, this follows a trail of contradictory comments from doctor anthony fauci throughout the pandemic, he went back and forth on masks and herd immunity as well as working with facebook to downplay the. the covid 19 was linked from the wuhan lab. carley: we will have more on this later in the show. as the administration s big brother tactic spark outrage the wall street journal editorial board member kimberly stross offices this may come back to bite the white house. kind of remarkable, only this week we had the former president of the united states sued big tech arguing they violated first amendment standards because they were acting as arms of the government and here we have the white house and jen psaki giving talking points that seem a
paul: we re back with kim strassel, kyle peterson and wall street journal editorial board member allysia finley. kyle, give us a couple highlights of the subs tans of the proposals. first is the new taxes. there will be a medicare employer contribution, essentially that seems like a per head tax per employee. that s supposed to raise about $9 trillion over 10 years. paul: that s a tax on anybody who works for a big company that now provides health care and that would be middles class. right. exactly. there s also she s talking about raising the corporate income tax back to 35%. applying it as a global minimum so if you make some profits in a jurisdiction where the rate is lower you would pay the difference. the second group is sort of waving away costs, administrative costs will be lower she says. we re going to pay doctors at medicare rates which some analysts say is about 25% less. paul: 110% of medicare. hospitals will get 110 paul: right.
paul: we re back with kim strassel, kyle peterson and wall street journal editorial board member allysia finley. kyle, give us a couple highlights of the subs tans of the proposals. first is the new taxes. there will be a medicare employer contribution, essentially that seems like a per head tax per employee. that s supposed to raise about $9 trillion over 10 years. paul: that s a tax on anybody who works for a big company that now provides health care and that would be middles class. right. exactly. there s also she s talking about raising the corporate income tax back to 35%. applying it as a global minimum so if you make some profits in a jurisdiction where the rate is lower you would pay the difference. the second group is sort of waving away costs, administrative costs will be lower she says. we re going to pay doctors at medicare rates which some analysts say is about 25% less. paul: 110% of medicare. hospitals will get 110