[applause]. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] good afternoon. Welcome to the Cato Institute. Im the director of catos center for constitutional studies and your host or two days for a odd professor Randy Barnetts new book. Our republican constitution, securing the liberty and sovereignty of we the people with a foreword by george will. Let me also welcome our cspan audience as well as those watching through catos live streaming. Released just two days ago by harpercollins broadside, this book is sure to receive wide attention and deservedly so. In fact, i just learned its available at costco, so people who are watching this and these men cannot do this for them run right out and pick up a copy of the book. It is likely to receive wide attention as i said because it speaks in a fundamental way to the political divisions we see in america today, divisions about health care, gun control, affirmative action, immigration and so much more. But about the fire, more fundament
Where were you and what actually got you connected to the Civil Rights Movement . Deborah i read a book by richard cougar called social justice which was about brown versus the board of education and it was a gripping narrative. And i thought, that is what i wanted to do. Brian where were you . Deborah oh, i was a High School Student in chicago. Brian was there any person in your family deborah no. Brian nobody in your family was a lawyer . Deborah no, nobody thought it was a good idea. Brian where did you go . Deborah i went to yale law school. Brian what was it like at the time . Deborah there wasnt a lot of women. In my class, there was maybe 13 women. Most of the great lawyers were, of course, all men. Brian what did you notice about being a woman in law school at yale . Deborah how little notice i gave to it, really, and this is in retrospect. What is startling to me now is just how law and life were. There was discrimination everywhere, but it wasnt often talked about in law scho
Where were you and what actually got you connected to the Civil Rights Movement . Deborah i read a book by richard cougar called social justice which was about brown versus the board of education and it was a gripping narrative. And i thought, that is what i wanted to do. Brian where were you . Deborah oh, i was a High School Student in chicago. Brian was there any person in your family deborah no. Brian nobody in your family was a lawyer . Deborah no, nobody thought it was a good idea. Brian where did you go . Deborah i went to yale law school. Brian what was it like at the time . Deborah there wasnt a lot of women. In my class, there was maybe 13 women. Most of the great lawyers were, of course, all men. Brian what did you notice about being a woman in law school at yale . Deborah how little notice i gave to it, really, and this is in retrospect. What is startling to me now is just how law and life were. There was discrimination everywhere, but it wasnt often talked about in law scho
Where were you and what actually got you connected to the Civil Rights Movement . Deborah i read a book by richard cougar called social justice which was about brown versus the board of education and it was a gripping narrative. And i thought, that is what i wanted to do. Brian where were you . Deborah oh, i was a High School Student in chicago. Brian was there any person in your family deborah no. Brian nobody in your family was a lawyer . Deborah no, nobody thought it was a good idea. Brian where did you go . Deborah i went to yale law school. Brian what was it like at the time . Deborah there wasnt a lot of women. In my class, there was maybe 13 women. Most of the great lawyers were, of course, all men. Brian what did you notice about being a woman in law school at yale . Deborah how little notice i gave to it, really, and this is in retrospect. What is startling to me now is just how law and life were. There was discrimination everywhere, but it wasnt often talked about in law scho
Heard of that. We all remember typhoid mary of lore and she had the ability to infect people. Do your typhoid marys have the ability to infect people when theyre asymptomatic . We dont know. Thats the question. Typhoid mary, in the case of her, she was dealing with a bacterial infection. Right. What i do know for a fact, there have been a number of asymptomatic nonfebrill people whose blood has been drawn and they tested positive. I think there is something about the pcr test. In medicine, you never say 100 . The thing with ebola, if you dont bat 1 wh00 every day, it exposed. My point is we need go to africa and fight the disease over there and keep it contained. Two of your doctors were infected and werent sure why. We had two nurses in dallas and were infected and were not sure why. That underscores there is a lot more not known about this disease and is known and i would extend that to mr. Waxman, we all need humility on this. And what you did in dallas to have good discipline to wh