i can t believe she s gone. it s a great loss, great loss. i just hope that charles can live up to what his mother has obviously instilled in him. that will be a wonderful legacy for him to carry forward. and just moments ago we saw king charles iii showing everyone what it means to carry on in the midst of grief, coming here to buckingham palace for the first time as king, shaking hands with some of the absolute throngs of crowds that have gathered outside in the wake of his mother s death. all of this with a host of tributes to the monarch who sat on the throne for seven decades. new local time, the bells at westminster abbey and other churches in london and all across the uk pealed in the queen s memory. and one hour later the queen was honored with gun salutes at the tower of london, hyde park, edinburgh castle in scotland and several other locations around the united kingdom. later today king charles is going to meet with the new prime minister, liz truss, before del
years. a safe prediction to make. but the fact that elizabeth was part of the cultural ethos for so long, part of the wallpaper of global life for 70 years through storm and strife, and to expect any successor to have that kind of an impact is unreasonable i think. i think we ll see a very well thought out address that will try to strike a key note for what king charles would think would be i suppose a 20 year or so reign if all goes well. and in 20 years, as we would say in the south, ain t nothing. you know, winston churchhill has been on everyone s mind because he was queen elizabeth s first prime minister, reputed to have said always set out as you intends to carry on. and i m sure that kind of advice is very much in the king s mind
actually answer and address and why wasn t there a proper security presence that day? that s, again, a classic. it s a classic change of subject to divert attention to somewhere else. that would have been putting him on the committee. we know he was part of the efforts to overturn the election. and there s questions whether they will prosecute folks like mark meadows who is being held in contempt of congress and there s pressure on joe biden to be more vocal on this issue of democracy heading into the 202 elections. lots of tbds. roger stone tomorrow gaurn tease a little bit of drama. safe prediction. dramatic policy shift from the federal reserve, but will it help drive down decade high prices? the one desire you are, you are, don t wanna hear you say.
[bleep] of every color from the nice people of every color. i would be for that, that s how a color-blind society should be. nice people here come up over there. in that group, i bet he would find some new friends among those white racists who just like him also hate black, powerful, independent women. [applause] is this a safe prediction, that he would probably not engage you in the same manner that he engaged condoleezza rice? if he was on this show and the topic was broached, do you think he might operate in the same vein with you? or what he may be think about it? i don t know.
compromise for the sake of all americans, and the hope is that the congressman boehner, speaker boehner, can cobble together this 100 plus republican coalition to side with democrats to get this thing passed. if he can do that, then we might have ourselves a bill today. chris, if we can make a pretty safe prediction, would it be that joe biden, who is already arguably the most powerful vice president we ve ever had is going to be very busy in the new year? i think if history is any indication, we re going to be facing the same kind of situation again. i know that s not what the american people want to hear, but that is the sad reality. the way the congress right now is working it s dysfunctional. they wait until the last minute to deal with this thing these things. i think the vice president, i think, played a critical role in making this happen. i think he is going to play a criminal role again, and until i think members of congress and particularly republican party realizes tha