laura, what happens when a country s leader makes a bad, unpopular decision? apparently, that depends on the country. because, british minister resigning today after only six weeks in office. her economic plan plunged britain into turmoil, and her own conservative party, turned against her. you know, in this country, the voters decide, but the candidates are nominated by the two major parties as you all know, which limits the leadership choices. tonight, dueling panels are back. allison taking on this very topic of how do you solve a problem like unpopular leaders? we have to set the clock. 4:00, we will see which panel can come up with the spicier answers about this. this is not going to be like that show where there s a horrible ending at the end? there s no death coming? there s a huge bucket of slime that will fall on one of our heads if we don t deliver on the panel. that is true. which person do you think would be more upset if her hair gets messed up? all r
we need to give them a role, what is the solution? well, i am going to have to talk to don draper about that. where do we get from where we started this, in terms of pop- culture? i mean, i had coded. my first nurse was a man. i credit him with saving my life and he wasn t what i was inspecting. i worked in the boys club. you sure did. nypd. you sure did. my last commissioner was a woman of color. which, the place had some adjusting to do. did they adjust? sure they did. and you know, i think that these shifts are a big learning curve. i think the neurological piece needs study, because we have to figure out what that really is. richard teed it up. i think that he will tell us what the solutions are. laura? what is the answer here? it is so fascinating.
york and there were two court cases to overturn the maps, it is happening all over the country. we are turning into an country of election sheets. also, we do have an impeachment process but we never remove anyone afterwards. we have exhausting impeachments but no one gets removed. lickety-split. is much different, we have seen that happen twice in the last two or three years? that s it. the bell signals we are done. laura? thoughts? for whom the bell tolls. i will say that right now. you guys were good. i was intrigued the entire time. i will say, mara, i do want to see the impersonation. i got to tell you. can you just hold on. because i won a contest when i was 13 years old it was a british accent contest. i m sitting the bar very high. i would like a spot of tea, please. well done.
thanks for the research of great conversation, you guys but that was really thought- provoking. as laura said. what do you all think about the issues affecting men and boys today? that, and anything else you want to say to laura and me, tweet us at laura kirks and alisyn camerota. visibly diminish wrinkled skin in just two days. new crepe corrector lotion only from gold bond. champion your skin. shipstation saves us so much time
hardhearted approach to this. to laura s point, women have been discriminated against in our society and in our world for ever. there is still major discopathy between women s pay and men s pay. obviously, on the mental health stuff, that needs to be taken seriously. richard point and some of his proposals are really interesting, but when it comes to the economics and education, i think that we should be celebrating the fact that women are making corrections why does it have to come at the cost of men? why does it have to be a zero- sum game? from the data i read, a lot of it was men staying where they were and women improving, and that, to me, something coming to be celebrated, not something to be bemoaned. i think a lot of this has to do with a post-industrialized economy. as we have been talking about these traditionally masculine, male-dominated industries like manufacturing, like coal mining, have declined. meanwhile, the industries that