And that relationship that we have with canada has enabled us to truly be able to provide Aerospace Control and maritime warning. That relationship is critical to the security of the United States and canada. Both our countries benefit from that against existential threats. That relationship that we have with canada is a model that is worthy of emulating. But a an Aerial Threat over the poles is not the only threat that north america faces. The Security Landscape is evolving. And north america faces a threat from the south. Now our threat from the south is not presently an existential threat but it is a Security Threat nonetheless and this threat that is transnational in nature exploits seams between countries. Its an organized threat. It is a networked threat. It is agile. Its adaptive and it can reach the point to where it actually destabilizes regions and it can also challenge sovereignty. So we broadly describe that threat as transnational organized crime. Now this threat enters th
Undesirable development insofar she thought moving towards being a federal state would inevitably mean a breach in the long run with the united states. As for her, as for churchill, of course, remaining friends and allies with the americans was at least the second and probably the first principle of foreign policy. Next, john, i would like now to bring the doctor back into discussion in terms of Margaret Thatchers time in office. Oxford. I might ask you the question. How important do you think lady thatchers views were in shaping her later views in life . Why is it that Oxford University has been so incredibly successful in terms of producing british Prime Ministers, i believe, 26 have been educated at oxford. Far more impressive than cambridge, i might add, by i mile, i believe . Nothing parochial here. No bias. What was it about her oxford time that fashioned one of the truly great leaders of our time . Well, one thing i would say just to supplement what i have just heard from John S
Our campaign is a peoples campaign. [cheers and applause] we dont want wall street money. We dont want corporate money. We dont need billionaire money. We will win this on our own. [cheers and applause] and we will win this, very simple as senator turner said a few moments ago, enough is enough. [cheers and applause] this country faces some very serious problems, and the American People are catching on, that establishment politics and establishment economics is not going to solve those problems. [cheers and applause] and what the American People also understand is that at a time when wall street and Corporate America and Large Campaign donors have so much power, people instinctively understand that no president , not bernie sanders, not anybody else, can alone solve the enormous problems that we face. And what people know, and what this campaign is about, its not just electing a president. It is creating a political revolution. [cheers and applause] and what that means, what that means
Providing low income service. Sort of almost to make it politically good, not just politically acceptable, politically good for a company to price discriminate. I wasnt sure where you were headed with that. I cant think of what it is right now. But if they were to take samples of fingerprints that are on some of those voluntary agreements, you might find fingerprints somewhere. Thats good. I think thats great. The programs are there. Just one thing, back to yesterdays conversation. He said the one thing about the act is it allowed competition to enter. What the competition did, is before the telecomact, the prices that we had didnt make a whole lot of sense. All kinds of different cross subsidies. 25 cents a minute long distance. And what the competition did is forced all those prices to get rationalized. The High Cost Fund kind of impedes that whole process. One thing, theres really i think the benefits in terms of incentives for investment and those other things in the high cost area
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