a relationship fraught with misunderstandings told in fierce prose powerful seemingly endless sentences in her german translation a leader became a preserved the fury if you re not able to provide sort of the normal living for your family then you know it becomes sort of like something in your character or something that isn t good with you and then you don t believe in yourself again you lose your self esteem and this is what society does to man or a woman to a human being it changes us it sort of tell us that we re not good enough that we got what we deserved and that they don t deserve a lot and this is not fair. yvonne a psycho was still very young when she chose the life of a writer and got a tattoo of a maze on her left hand. she s now been writing for a good two decades her body of work includes stage plays journalism prose now she and her translator
mouth. and that goes to the fact that they both could be very sharp, blunt, and quick witted. that was also a big part of her personality, anderson. doug brinkley, just the extraordinary decency of mrs. bush over the years, in public life. it sort of harkens back to another time, both her and the former president. it really does. you were just talking about secret service. and she had a little feud with the secret service because as first lady, she wanted to be driven in a very small car, not a giant limo. they said no, you ve got to do the limo. she thought it was very ostentatious. she won that battle. she started to be taken around
love to say all the time, i have my daddy s eyes but my mother s mouth. and that goes to the fact that they both could be very sharp, blunt, and quick witted. that was also a big part of her personality, anderson. doug brinkley, just the extraordinary decency of mrs. bush over the years, in public life. it sort of harkens back to another time, both her and the former president. it really does. you were just talking about secret service. and she had a little feud with the secret service because as first lady, she wanted to be driven in a very small car, not a giant limo. they said no, you ve got to do the limo. she thought it was very ostentatious. she won that battle. she started to be taken around in a much smaller vehicle. then she wanted to fly commercial.
profit motive, they re cutting out the insurance company. they re doing something directly. this is a single payer experiment. if they can be successful here, that is going to be a model that is going to fuel the call for replacing obamacare not with a trump plan but with something like single payer. it is an interesting concept. when you look at the difference between america s health care system and the health care systems of 34 other rich countries or 58 countries, however you do it, they all have some version of not single payer necessarily, but universal health care. it sort of doesn t matter to americans whether that universal health coverage comes from the government or the private sector, whatever it is. this could be the beginning the sharp edge of something. one of the arguments has often been, that might work in other countries, but is it scaleable? when you see forces like amazon, berkshire hathaway, they don t just have buying power. best in class in everything the
economy to float the sense of accomplishment and giving voters the sense that things are going okay. why change? i think we have to acknowledge in the off years it is usually better for the opposing party. the democrats have an automatic advantage. i don t think generic polling is helpful because it will depend on the candidates the republicans run in those districts. the other thing is, the republicans are basically trying to get this message out. but they are fighting against a guy who is continually shooting himself in the foot to. paul: the president of the united states. if you read his tweets. not the one today. it was very gracious and humorous way to communicate. in general, he is abrasive and always picking fights. it sort of belittles him and people don t want to be associated with someone like that. paul: dan, what else can republicansrepublicans