Podcast appearances and mentions of Kirsten Gillibrand

United States Senator from New York

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Latest podcast episodes about Kirsten Gillibrand

Northern Light
Nuclear in the North Country, Gillibrand on Rescission Package, Norsk Titanium, Forest Ranger rescues, Paddle for Betterment

Northern Light

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2025 29:47


(Jul 11, 2025) Leaders from around the region gathered in Alexandria Bay this week for an informational session on nuclear energy; The recissions package that would claw back $9.4 billion dollars in already approved funding will likely be voted on by the Senate next week; Plattsburgh  manufacturer has received orders from two government contractors; Recent DEC rescues included two litter carry-outs and a helicopter airlift; and, a preview of the Paddle for Betterment this weekend!

FAQ NYC
Episode 428: Mamdani Derangement Syndrome Is Real

FAQ NYC

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2025 37:05


It seems like no one — from President Donald Trump to Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, the New York Post to the New York Times — can seem to line up a clean swing at Zohran Mamdani. Instead, the young socialist who just upended Democratic politics keeps benefitting from the wild shots aimed at him while members of the establishments determined to defeat him play  wild game of chicken against each other. FAQ NYC hosts Christina Greer, Katie Honan and Harry Siegel discuss all that and much more, including a summer of drones vs. sharks, Eric Adams railing at a fundraised in the Hamptons of all places about the elite press supposedly picking on him, and Cuomo's post-primary conundrum.

Ralph Nader Radio Hour
Power Unchecked

Ralph Nader Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2025 81:27


Hassan El-Tayyeb of the Friends Committee on National Legislation returns with an update on the worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza and the growing movement to end U.S. support for the assault. Then, Mackenzie Knight Boyle from the Federation of American Scientists walks us through the scale and secrecy of the U.S. nuclear weapons program — and the risks it poses to the world. Finally, constitutional scholar Bruce Fein joins us to call out the unchecked power and ethical failures of the Supreme Court.Hassan El-Tayyab is the lead lobbyist on Middle East policy for the Friends Committee on National Legislation. Mr. El-Tayyab co-chairs the U.S. Ceasefire Coalition and leads the Friends Committee's work to end the humanitarian crisis in Yemen, advocate for Palestinian human rights, and advance diplomacy with Iran.(The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation) militarizes aid and is run by private armed contractors. It violates all these principles of neutrality, independence, impartiality. And we even saw the GHF's own executive director, Jake Wood, resign in protest in May, saying that he couldn't work in a way that didn't adhere to these humanitarian principles.Hassan El-TayyabMackenzie Knight-Boyle is a Senior Research Associate for the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists, where she co-authors the Nuclear Notebook––an authoritative open-source estimate of global nuclear forces and trends.Probably the scariest false alarm was in 1979, A training cassette that was simulating a massive attack with nuclear missiles from the Soviet Union on the United States was mistakenly entered into the primary computer system of North American Aerospace Defense Command, NORAD. And it was then broadcast to other command centers as if it was going out in the National Command Authority alert system. And because of that, the proper procedures were followed for a situation like this, where the fighter jets took off. The nuclear bombers, carrying nuclear weapons, were put into the sky, missile crews were put on high alert, which means the missiles are ready to launch within seconds. And the president's doomsday plane, which is essentially the war room in the sky for the president in emergency situations, was also put into the air. And it took six minutes for them to realize that this was a training cassette that had been mistakenly put into the system.Mackenzie Knight-BoyleBruce Fein is a Constitutional scholar and an expert on international law. Mr. Fein was Associate Deputy Attorney General under Ronald Reagan and he is the author of Constitutional Peril: The Life and Death Struggle for Our Constitution and Democracy, and American Empire: Before the Fall.There can be good faith disagreements over the interpretation of the Constitution. But when you have a course of action which so systematically shows a favoritism towards limitless executive power towards corporations as well with regard to money and politics, no longer does it seem to be a matter of good faith, a disagreement, but it's a matter of advancing the partisan political interests of the president, the presidency, and that is, I think, an impeachable offense.Bruce Fein (on impeaching Supreme Court justices)News 7/4/251. The New York City Board of Elections has released the final results in the Democratic Mayoral primary – after accounting for reallocation of votes via ranked-choice tabulations. The final results are stunning. Zohran Mamdani, up by approximately seven points on election night, has emerged with a whopping 12-point victory over disgraced former Governor Andrew Cuomo. Perhaps even more impressive, Mamdani completely reshaped the electorate. According to the New York Times, he turned out young people in record numbers to the point that the largest voter bloc in this election was 18–29-year-olds, a complete reversal of usual trends.2. Speaking of reversing trends, it is worth reviewing Zohran's victory in light of the groups he won by large margins. Namely men, including young men of all backgrounds, as well as Latino and Asian voters, per Jacobin. These are groups that Democrats have notably lost ground with, including in New York City, and have devoted considerable resources to winning back to their coalition. Zohran's win therefore should give Democrats a new sense of optimism and they should seek to embrace the winning course that he has charted.3. Of course, being the Democratic Party, they are instead doing the opposite. Despite his earthquake victory, few high-profile New York Democrats have endorsed Zohran. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has not, nor has Governor Kathy Hochul, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, or other powerful New York House Democrats like Gregory Meeks. The other U.S. Senator from New York, Kirsten Gillibrand, has been openly hostile, calling Zohran “permissive [of] violence against Jews,” in an interview with Brian Lehrer on WNYC. This is of course racist, inflammatory and flatly untrue. Under pressure from other Democrats, Gillibrand retracted her statement, and “apologized for mischaracterizing Mamdani's record and for her tone on the call,” according to POLITICO. This however gives us a taste of the kind of dirty tricks and defamatory rhetoric the party could deploy against Mamdani between now and November.4. That said, Zohran is picking up significant backing locally – an indication that those actually on the ground know which way the wind is blowing. On Monday, Mamdani was endorsed by the NYC Central Labor Council-AFL-CIO. The NYCCLC is “the nation's largest regional labor federation…[bringing] together 300 unions… [and representing] more than 1 million workers.” On Tuesday, he won the endorsement of New York Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, who represents Westchester, according to reporter Vaughn Golden. Zohran has already earned the endorsement of New York Attorney General Tish James. Expect this divergence between national and local Democratic figures to continue.5. In stark contrast to Zohran, whose political brand is defined by seemingly endless energy, Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman shocked observers this week when he complained about having to do the bare minimum as a U.S. Senator. According to Rolling Stone, during Senate deliberations on the so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill,” Fetterman was quoted saying “I just want to go home. I've missed our entire trip to the beach.” Fetterman's comments are particularly galling seeing as he has been chronically absent from Senate hearings, committee meetings and even votes. In other words, Fetterman is complaining about doing the bare minimum for the people of Pennsylvania, but is failing to do even that.6. The bill did of course pass, with Vice-President JD Vance voting to break a 50-50 tie vote in the Senate. On Twitter, Vance justified his vote from criticism regarding its massive cuts to Medicaid by saying “The thing that will bankrupt this country more than any other policy is flooding the country with illegal immigration and then giving those migrants generous benefits. The OBBB fixes this problem. And therefore it must pass.” AOC called his vote, “An absolute and utter betrayal of working families.”7. In more news related to the bill, Trump and Elon Musk have been trading threats regarding its passage. On Monday, TIME reported Elon Musk tweeted, “If this insane spending bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day. Our country needs an alternative to the Democrat-Republican uni-party, so that the people actually have a voice.” Musk added, “Every member of Congress who campaigned on reducing government spending and then immediately voted for the biggest debt increase in history should hang their head in shame…they will lose their primary next year, if it is the last thing I do on this Earth.” Musk has also reportedly thrown his financial weight behind Congressman Thomas Massie of Kentucky, perhaps the most vocal critic of Trump in the House Republican caucus. Trump is already backing a primary challenge against Massie; Musk intervening on the other side has turned this race into a climactic proxy battle between the two figures once called “co-presidents.”8. Trump, for his part, threatened to deport Elon Musk. Asked about this directly, Trump told reporters, “We'll have to take a look. We might have to put DOGE on Elon. You know what DOGE is? The monster that might have to go back and eat Elon. Wouldn't that be terrible? He gets a lot of subsidies,” per USA Today. This is of course true. Musk's companies have received billions in corporate welfare from the federal government over the years. It is unclear how much the stock value of, for instance Tesla, would suffer from the money faucet being turned off.9. Entertaining as Trump's threats to deport Musk are however, we should not lose sight of the ever-darker reality of deportation setting in nationwide. NOLA.com reports “An Iranian woman who has lived in the United States for 47 years, has no criminal record, and is married to a US citizen was detained by ICE as she gardened outside her New Orleans home.” Expect to hear more stories of secret police rounding up law abiding Americans in the days to come.10. Finally, in more positive news, Reuters reports China is quietly moving to rebuild Cuba's energy grid. This report notes that “Officials…announced China was participating in a project to modernize Cuba's entire electrical grid, with 55 solar parks to be built in 2025, and another 37 by 2028, for a total of 2,000 MW - a massive undertaking that, when complete, would represent nearly two-thirds of present-day demand.” Cuba joined China's international infrastructure development program Belt and Road in 2018. This report notes that China is taking on the development role that Russia formerly played in Havana, but has been unable to deliver on since it embarked on its special military operation-turned-quagmire in Ukraine. Cuba's energy grid has experienced continue failures for the past several years for myriad reasons, exacerbated by Trump's increasingly draconian sanctions regime. This is just another example of a reality becoming increasingly clear to much of the world: the U.S. tears down developing countries' infrastructure, China helps build it up.This has been Francesco DeSantis, with In Case You Haven't Heard. Get full access to Ralph Nader Radio Hour at www.ralphnaderradiohour.com/subscribe

HC Audio Stories
Residents Brace for Health Cuts

HC Audio Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2025 5:46


Millions expected to lose coverage In addition to love, health insurance pushed Catherine Lisotta and her husband to marry. The Garrison resident's job in the magazine industry offered coverage after he lost his job. When Lisotta got laid off, the couple turned to New York's health exchange, an insurance marketplace where people without access to coverage from employers, and incomes too high for public insurance, can enroll in a private plan using tax credits that lower premium costs. She never considered going without health coverage. "It would worry me too much," said Lisotta, whose insurance is covering a recent hip replacement that would have cost her over $20,000. "It would be like tempting God." Lisotta and other people using exchanges in New York and other states are now facing changes to health care that are estimated to raise the number of uninsured people by 12 million. Those proposals, embedded in U.S. House and Senate versions of the One Big Beautiful Bill, will cost 7.8 million people coverage through Medicaid, according to the Congressional Budget Office The bill was narrowly passed in the House on Thursday (July 3) after passing the Senate on Tuesday (July 1). President Trump signed it on Friday (July 4). New York's two Democratic senators - Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, voted against the legislation, as did Rep. Pat Ryan, a House Democrat representing the 18th Congressional District, which includes Beacon. Rep. Mike Lawler, a Republican who represents the 17th District, which includes Philipstown, voted for the legislation. New York State predicts that 1.5 million statewide will lose insurance, including 38,400 in the 18th District and 31,200 in the 17th District. The bill's provisions would also affect the health care exchanges in New York and other states established when President Barack Obama signed the Affordable Care Act in 2010. Among the changes, people will have to verify their eligibility before enrolling instead of being allowed temporary conditional eligibility. The bill also changes a provision that allows any immigrant who is legally in the country to be eligible for coverage and subsidies through the exchanges, largely limiting that benefit to green-card holders and barring enrollment for refugees and people seeking asylum. There is also concern that Congress will not extend the more-robust tax credits, and expanded eligibility, approved under the administration of President Joe Biden and expiring at the end of the year. Letting them expire would cost 4.2 million people insurance, according to the CBO. Premiums could more than double in both Lawler and Ryan's districts without the extension, according to KFF, a health policy organization. Christine Ortiz, who owns Oh! Designs Interiors in Cold Spring, is among the insured who has been receiving text messages from the state warning that "federal rules may change your health insurance." She not only uses the exchange, but so do a son and daughter. One of them is also self-employed. "The only reason that we can be self-employed is because of health care," she said. "I have a studio in the village, trying to build my business, and having to not have to worry about health insurance has been such a blessing." Sun River Health, whose 40 locations include one in Beacon, estimates that 20,000 of its patients will lose Medicaid, said Ernest Klepeis, its chief of government affairs and advocacy. As the OBBB has worked its way through Congress, Klepeis has been urging senators and representatives to reject the Medicaid cuts, which include stronger work requirements for childless adults between 19 and 64, and a new requirement that recipients recertify their eligibility every six months instead of yearly. While Republicans say that the changes will only impact people who refuse to work, advocates say that most of the people who lost coverage from more stringent work requirements imposed in Arkansas and Georgia were actually eligible for Medicaid. ...

Bad Hasbara - The World's Most Moral Podcast
121: Galactify The Intifada, with Pallavi Gunalan

Bad Hasbara - The World's Most Moral Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2025 104:02


Matt and Daniel are joined by comedian Pallavi Gunalan to check out the continued hysterical Democratic meltdown over Zohran Mamdani featuring Eric Adams, Hakeem Jeffries, and Kirsten Gillibrand, and the best thing to happen at Glasto since me wellies woz properly chuffed, innit?Please donate to Islamic Relief USA: https://irusa.orgFind Pallavi Gunalan at https://www.instagram.com/pallavigunalan/See Francesca Fiorentini and Matt Lieb!July 5 in Pasadena, CA: https://www.showclix.com/event/New-World-Disorder-07-05-25-9-30-pmAugust 1 in Seattle, WA: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/comedians-francesca-fiorentini-and-matt-lieb-tickets-1354093864199August 28 in Houston, TX: https://bit.ly/mattfranhtxSubscribe to the Patreon https://www.patreon.com/badhasbaraWhat's The Spin playlist: https://spoti.fi/4kjO9tLSubscribe/listen to Bad Hasbara wherever you get your podcasts.Spotify https://spoti.fi/3HgpxDmApple Podcasts https://apple.co/4kizajtSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/bad-hasbara/donationsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

The Daily Zeitgeist
Zohran The Unflappable, Return Of Melty Trump 07.01.25

The Daily Zeitgeist

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2025 61:31 Transcription Available


In episode 1888, Jack and Miles are joined by journalist and author of Becoming Baba: Fatherhood, Faith, and Finding Meaning in America, Aymann Ismail, to discuss… ZOHRAAAAAANNNN, M3GAN 2.0 Loses Box Office Race to F1, Disney World’s Trump Animatronic No Longer Looks Like A F**ked Up Hilary Clinton and more! Zohran Mamdani says, "I don't think we should have billionaires because frankly it is so much money in a moment of such inequality" N.Y. Senator ‘Misspoke’ When She Falsely Claimed Zohran Mamdani Condoned ‘Global Jihad’ Box Office: ‘F1’ Zooms to $55.6M Opening and $144M Globally, ‘M3GAN 2.0’ Bombs With $10M U.S. Start Disney Updates Donald Trump Animatronic for The Hall of Presidents Following Hillary Clinton Controversy LISTEN: Grind by Les SinsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Countdown with Keith Olbermann
TRUMP'S RUNNING A PROTECTION RACKET PRESIDENCY - 6.30.25

Countdown with Keith Olbermann

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2025 67:21 Transcription Available


SEASON 3 EPISODE 143: COUNTDOWN WITH KEITH OLBERMANN A-Block (1:45) SPECIAL REPORT: Which is worse? That Trump is running a “Protection Racket Presidency” and bribed one Senator to vote for his Big Beautiful Soak The Poor Budget Bill while metaphorically bumping off one Senator who wouldn’t? Or that Trump threatened Israel, threatened the government of Israel, if Israel's courts don’t do what HE wants on behalf of Netanyahu – and nobody noticed. Which is worse? Well it’s a trick question because these are actually just two different aspects of the same story. It’s a protection racket. These are a) the domestic operations of the protection racket, and b) the international operations of the protection racket. Thom Tillis, the vaguely responsible Republican senator from North Carolina, refused to let Trump politically rape him Saturday night and would not vote to advance the budget bill. Trump had been threatening him for weeks, months, accelerated it, finally began to ask for volunteers to primary him, Tillis announced yesterday he will retire from the senate at the end of his term next year. So much for Mr. Tillis. So much for somebody, anybody, in the Republican party saying “I owe this country something.” So much for the thought that when the country is up against it and the breaks are beating the boys, tell ‘em to go out there with all they got and win just one for the Tiller. I don’t know where I’ll be then, but I’ll know about it and I’ll be happy.” Well I know where Thom Tillis will be: he’ll be back home in Cornelius, North Carolina. Presumably drinking heavily. Reflecting on how he represents the utter moral and ethical decline of the already near-bankrupt and nearly-totally-declined Republican Party. Meanwhile Senator Lisa Murkowski turns out to be Susan Collins with less Kibuki make-up. She sold her soul to get herself a carveout for Alaska, only to find out the Senate Parliamentarian says it violates the Senate's Byrd Rule and the carveout must be carved out. Lol. AND TRUMP THREATENED TO DEFUND ISRAEL - what would be the end of the political career of any other American figure - and nobody noticed. And it seems to have worked. ALSO: WHY KRISTEN GILLIBRAND MUST RESIGN (and get treatment), Stephen Miller has a financial interest in the ICE raids, the plot to make Eric Adams the Republican nominee for mayor of New York, and you missed the new SCOTUS rulings on porn! Pay attention, Mike Johnson! B-Block (37:32) THE WORST PERSONS IN THE WORLD: Jeopardy aficionados worried about a conflict of interest because the contestant was related to the person who was the answer to the question? I was on two episodes of Jeopardy in which a contestant had the same name as the answer to the question, and where a contestant wrote four of the five sketches that were all the answers in an entire category! Plus the Fox host who doesn't know when World War 2 was or which American party caused breadlines; Chris Cuomo thinks AOC destroyed the Democratic Party not, say, he and his brother; and idiot Senator Bernie Moreno discusses "anals" with Laura Ingraham. C-Block (56:00) THINGS I PROMISED NOT TO TELL: It's that time again. July 10 is the 46th anniversary of my first broadcast on my first full-time broadcasting job, which means you have a choice: you have to listen to it, or skip it.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Labor Radio-Podcast Weekly
Union Strong; Pipe Up; Apple Box Talks; Buwa Basebetsi Updates; The Docker Podcast

Labor Radio-Podcast Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2025 36:12 Transcription Available


This week on the Labor Radio Podcast Weekly: Labor unions are leading the fight to protect workers from the impacts of artificial intelligence—from film and television to privacy and job security. On Union Strong, New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand calls out what she describes as a “big, beautiful betrayal” of working people hidden in the latest federal budget bill—and explains why unions must stay vigilant as AI reshapes entire industries. Then on Pipe Up, plumbers and pipefitters discuss the wave of major federal construction projects abruptly canceled or put on hold, costing union jobs across Maryland and Washington, D.C. In British Columbia, Apple Box Talks features Mikelle Sasakamoose, who shares how she's working to indigenize colonial spaces as the first Director of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation for the City of Burnaby. And on The Docker Podcast, ILWU longshore workers mark the 90th anniversary of the Battle of Ballantyne Pier—a defining moment of solidarity and resistance on Vancouver's waterfront. Plus, from South Africa's Buwa Basebetsi podcast, the remarkable story of an American activist who went underground after a 1970s bank heist and resurfaced decades later as a labor educator. Help us build sonic solidarity by clicking on the share button below. Highlights from labor radio and podcast shows around the country, part of the national Labor Radio Podcast Network of shows focusing on working people's issues and concerns. @nysaflcio @iatse891 #LaborRadioPod @AFLCIO Edited by Captain Swing, produced by Chris Garlock; social media guru Mr. Harold Phillips.

The Brian Lehrer Show
Call Your Senator: Sen Gillibrand on Trump's 'Big Beautiful Betrayal,' Mamdani's Victory and More

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2025 31:16


Kirsten Gillibrand, U.S. Senator (D-NY), talks about why she's referring to President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill" as the "big, beautiful betrayal," comments on New York State Assembly member Zohran Mamdani's win in the New York City mayoral primary race and more.

Union Strong - New York State AFL-CIO
The Big Beautiful Betrayal

Union Strong - New York State AFL-CIO

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2025 18:40


The Federal Budget Bill currently before the Senate is being called One Big, Beautiful Bill by its supporters, but U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand calls it a Big, Beautiful Betrayal of working people. On the latest episode of the Union Strong Podcast, Sen. Gillibrand discusses what is included in the bill, the impact the cuts would have on New Yorkers, and what you can do about it. She also discusses her efforts to support seniors and an initiative that would make childbirth free for families with private insurance. Senator Gillibrand's Aging Committee Newsletter: https://www.gillibrand.senate.gov/help/senate-aging-committee-newsletter/ Bipartisan Legislation on Childbirth Coverage: https://www.gillibrand.senate.gov/news/press/release/gillibrand-announces-bipartisan-legislation-that-would-make-childbirth-free-for-families-with-private-insurance/ Get involved: https://www.mobilize.us/nysaflcio/

Podcast UFO
671. Matt Ford The Good Trouble of UFOs

Podcast UFO

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2025 43:54


Martin Willis of Podcast UFO sits down with Emmy-winning journalist and political consultant Matt Ford, host of The Good Trouble Show. In this engaging interview, Matt shares his fascinating background, what sparked his interest in UFOs, and his thoughts on where the UAP conversation is headed.https://www.youtube.com/@TheGoodTroubleShowBIO: Matt Ford is an Emmy-winning journalist, producer, and political consultant based in Los Angeles. He's the creator and host of The Good Trouble Show, where he's interviewed major voices in the UAP space including Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Christopher Mellon, and Lue Elizondo. Matt is also the Director of Strategy at the UAP Disclosure Fund, helping to shape bipartisan UAP legislation, support whistleblowers, and expand public understanding of the topic. His work has been featured in The Daily Mail, The Debrief, and Crooks and Liars, cementing his role as a trusted voice in national security and government transparency.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/podcast-ufo--5922140/support.

Northern Light
Plattsburgh Air Force Base decay, Glens Falls mayoral race, Gillibrand on Iran, Smullen for NY-21, Indian Lake Monarch Festival, Outlaw band preview

Northern Light

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2025 33:15


(Jun 20, 2025) Plattsburgh officials are again calling on the federal government to address failing infrastructure at the former Air Force Base; Glens Falls' mayoral race will be decided on the June 24 primaries; NY Senator Kirsten Gillibrand says President Trump should pursue diplomacy, not war, in the Israel and Iran conflict; Assemblyman Robert Smullen says he's considering a run for NY-21 if Elise Stefanik runs for Governor; Indian Lake will be celebrating monarch butterflies this weekend; and, a preview of the EP of ‘The North Country's Premier Post-Outlaw Country Band.'

Bob Lonsberry
6/19 Hour 3

Bob Lonsberry

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2025 27:19


Bob talks about the water flow at Irondequoit Creek from yesterday's rain, Bob takes calls, talks about Iran, down syndrome and abortion, the state planning to provide legal assistance to illegal immigrants detained by ICE, the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of New York getting a knife pulled on him, and Gillibrand wanting $50 Million for food deserts.

Northern Light
Life during Dannemora escape, Gillibrand in Saranac Lake, Lonely Girl Comix

Northern Light

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2025 29:32


(Jun 17, 2025) We hear what the three-week Dannemora prison escape manhunt was like for the people nearby; Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand visited a hospital in Saranac Lake yesterday to bring more attention to potential cuts to Medicaid included in Trump's proposed federal budget; and we meet a social worker in the southern Adirondacks who created a comic book series to encourage the teenagers she works with.

Tech Path Podcast
Elizabeth Warren Attempts To Slow Crypto Bills... FAILS

Tech Path Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2025 17:13


The Senate voted Wednesday to advance legislation setting up a regulatory framework for payment stablecoins, bringing the crypto bill one step closer to a final vote in the upper chamber. Eighteen Democrats voted with almost every Republican to end debate on an updated version of the GENIUS Act.  ~This episode is sponsored by iTrust Capital~iTrustCapital | Get $100 Funding Reward + No Monthly Fees when you sign up using our custom link! ➜ https://bit.ly/iTrustPaul00:00 Intro00:18 Sponsor: iTrust Capital00:53 Bill delayed01:19 Intro - Businesses are coming02:06 Elizabeth Warren vs Dems03:17 Warren vs META04:07 Trump corruption05:50 Memecoin ban06:22 Kristen Gillibrand defeats anti-crypto dems08:06 Trump pressures politicians10:12 Adoption heating up11:10 Trump tariff update12:23 Scott Bessent defends Trump tariffs14:04 Tariff revenue14:41 Hedge funds plying catch up15:40 Treasury buy back16:00 Dollar to fall 10%16:31 USDC on XRP Ledger16:55 Outro#Crypto #Bitcoin #Ethereum~Elizabeth Warren Attempts To Slow Crypto Bills... FAILS

What's What
Letitia James Supports California, Hochul Grilled on Immigration Policy, and Music News on Counting Crows

What's What

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2025 6:08


Governor Kathy Hochul appeared before the United States House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. She was questioned by House Representatives on New York's status as a sanctuary city, which is a topic of concern for many republican lawmakers. WFUV's Alexandra Pfau reports. 21 state Attorneys General have signed onto an amicus brief decrying the deployment of the National Guard in L.A. against the wishes of Governor Gavin Newsom. WFUV's Adithi Vimalanathan reports. The Trump administration is planning to cut $1-billion dollars in federal funding for programs that provide mental health services in schools, including $71 million to New York. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is demanding that money be restored. WFUV's Livia Regina reports. Music news: What's What Music host Brenda Plascencia shares some of Counting Crows' recent FUV Live session. Also, coverage of tributes to Sly Stone and Sharon Van Etten & the Attachment Theory's new tour. What's What explores current events, culture, news and hot topic issues surrounding the New York metropolitan area. The weekday show includes features, interviews and music news exclusively from WFUV. New episodes air every weekday after 4 pm. News Host and Producer: Andrew McDonald Editor: Tess Novotny Theme Music: Joe Bergsieker

3 Martini Lunch
Fire & ICE in LA, Media Calls Riots Fun & Flames, Gillibrand's Midterm Misdirection

3 Martini Lunch

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2025 29:54


Join Jim and Greg for this Monday edition of the 3 Martini Lunch where they discuss the riots in Los Angeles, the media's spin on the riots as well as President Trump ordering the National Guard to help, and New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand's hypocritical new plan for putting Democrats back in the majority. First, they are aghast at the general unrest in Los Angeles as ICE agents seek to round up criminal illegal immigrants. Although being just an eight-minute walk from the LAPD, it took two hours for police to respond to the attacks on the Roybal Federal Building. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, and former VP Kamala Harris all claim overreach by President Trump for sending in the National Guard, but Jim and Greg note how the LAPD initially seemed disinterested in ending the violence. Now the LAPD itself is claiming to be overwhelmed. Next, Jim and Greg disdain the comical media coverage of the ‘mostly peaceful' LA riots. Local and federal sources say people are merely enjoying themselves as they watch fires burn, yet Jim has yet to see them enjoying chocolate and marshmallows around the burning cars. For some reason, Democrats are so afraid of appearing to be Trump supporters that they cannot stand by simple expectations of peace, law, and order. Last, they scoff at Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand's plans to bring Democrats back to power by urging moderate Senate candidates in 2026. She's a strange person to deliver that message after her history of pretending to be a moderate in the House and then immediately becoming a far left U.S. Senator. Jim blithely recalls Gillibrand's pitiful and long forgotten attempt at running for president in 2020. Please visit our great sponsors:Talk it out with Betterhelp. Our listeners get 10% off their first month at https://BetterHelp.com/3MLRight now, with zero commitment, try OCI for free.  Go to https://Oracle.com/MARTINIIt's free, online, and easy to start—no strings attached. Enroll in Understanding Capitalism with Hillsdale College. Visit https://hillsdale.edu/Martini

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed
Three Martini Lunch: Fire & ICE in LA, Media Calls Riots Fun & Flames, Gillibrand's Midterm Misdirection

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2025 29:54


Join Jim and Greg for this Monday edition of the 3 Martini Lunch where they discuss the riots in Los Angeles, the media's spin on the riots as well as President Trump ordering the National Guard to help, and New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand's hypocritical new plan for putting Democrats back in the majority. First, […]

The Constitutionalist
#62 - The Mayflower Compact

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 43:48


On the sixty-second episode of the Constitutionalist, Ben, Shane, and Matthew discuss the Mayflower Compact, and its implications for American political life as one of the nation's earliest constitutional compacts. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller colonial america political thought joni ernst political debate sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams political commentary american experiment ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune legal education electoral reform constitutional studies publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis separation of powers richard blumenthal national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy tammy baldwin thom tillis american founding constitutionalism chris van hollen civic education tina smith james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester john morton mazie hirono mayflower compact pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley plymouth colony benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state mike rounds george ross kevin cramer cindy hyde smith revolutionary america apush department of commerce state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy john barrasso pat roberts roger wicker william williams american political thought william floyd elbridge gerry george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee constitutional affairs legal philosophy mayflower pilgrims samuel chase constitutional conventions american political development alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Roundtable
Congressional Corner with New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand

The Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2025 18:55


New York U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand speaks with WAMC's Ian Pickus on the "Congressional Corner" June 3.

The Constitutionalist
#61 - Bureaucracy and the Constitution w/ Joseph Natali

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2025 83:19


On the sixty-first episode, Shane and Ben are joined by Joseph Natali, a Ph.D. student at Baylor University dissertating on the constitutionalism of bureaucracy and how Presidents succeed or fail in exercising control over the executive branch. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew K. Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits presidents political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison bureaucracy lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock natali susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate david perdue sherrod brown ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams political commentary american experiment ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis richard blumenthal separation of powers national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy tammy baldwin thom tillis american founding constitutionalism chris van hollen civic education tina smith james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester john morton mazie hirono pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles political education constitutional government charles carroll lamar alexander cory gardner temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state mike rounds george ross kevin cramer cindy hyde smith revolutionary america department of commerce apush state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy john barrasso pat roberts roger wicker william williams american political thought william floyd elbridge gerry george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee constitutional affairs legal philosophy constitutional conventions samuel chase american political development alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#60 - Educating the Statesman with Shilo Brooks

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2025 59:57


On the sixtieth episode, Matthew and Ben are joined by Shilo Brooks, Executive Director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University, to discuss his immensely popular course "The Art of Statesmanship and the Political Life." We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew K. Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power art house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden executive director elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate educating baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs institutions elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock statesman susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate david perdue sherrod brown shilo ben sasse tammy duckworth political leadership john cornyn mark warner abigail adams political commentary american experiment ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political life legal analysis richard blumenthal separation of powers national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy tammy baldwin thom tillis american founding constitutionalism chris van hollen liberal education tina smith civic education james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins american ideals richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey statesmanship benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester james madison program john morton mazie hirono pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government moral leadership political education charles carroll lamar alexander cory gardner temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state kevin cramer mike rounds george ross cindy hyde smith revolutionary america apush department of commerce state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy pat roberts john barrasso roger wicker william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee legal philosophy samuel chase american political development constitutional conventions alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast
The Future Of The ERA After 100 Years

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2025 17:38


Today, we revisit a conversation about the Equal Rights Amendment, and its current status.On Today's Show:Julie Suk, a law professor at Fordham University and the author of We the Women: The Unstoppable Mothers of the Equal Rights Amendment (Skyhorse Publishing, 2020), reviews the history of the Equal Rights Amendment, from its introduction by Alice Paul in 1923 through its current disputed status, following passage by a 38th state and President Biden's declaration that it's the "law of the land."

The Brian Lehrer Show
Call Your Senator: Sen Gillibrand on Trump's Big Bill

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 17:51


U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) talks about her work in Washington, particularly her initial response to Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill', which just passed the House.

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast
Sen. Gillibrand on the House's Tax and Safety Net Cuts

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 17:50


This morning, the House passed a spending bill after many long late nights of negotiations. Now it moves on to the Senate.On Today's Show:U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) talks about her work in Washington, and her view of the Trump and GOP budget proposal.

Thinking Crypto Interviews & News

Crypto News: Senator Hagerty and Gillibrand says the Genius Act Stablecoin legislation will be passed next week. Central banks testing smart contract toolkit under BIS Project Pine. Mike Novogratz Galaxy listed on Nasdaq.Show Sponsor -

The Constitutionalist
#59 - Tocqueville - The Omnipotence of the Majority

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2025 52:00


On the fifty-ninth episode of the Constitutionalist, Ben and Matthew discuss Volume 1, Part 2, Chapter 7 of Alexis De Tocqueville's "Democracy in America" on the omnipotence of the majority. They discuss Tocqueville's warnings of the detrimental effects of democracy on the citizen. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs majority elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton omnipotence robert morris alexis de tocqueville thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams american experiment political commentary ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden originalism michael bennet john thune electoral reform constitutional studies legal education publius department of homeland security john hart bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis separation of powers richard blumenthal national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history american founding thom tillis tammy baldwin constitutionalism chris van hollen civic education tina smith james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll lamar alexander cory gardner temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state kevin cramer george ross mike rounds cindy hyde smith revolutionary america apush department of commerce state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen pat roberts john barrasso roger wicker william williams american political thought william floyd elbridge gerry george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee american political development samuel chase constitutional conventions alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#58 - Montesquieu and the Founding with William B. Allen

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2025 58:24


On the fifty-eighth episode, Shane, Matthew, and Ben are joined by William B. Allen, Professor Emeritus of Political Philosophy at Michigan State University, to discuss Montesquieu's political philosophy and its influence on the American Founding and eighteenth-century British politics. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew K. Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american founders history president donald trump culture power house politics british phd colorado joe biden elections dc local congress political supreme court union bernie sanders federal kamala harris constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits michigan state university political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor founding george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin professor emeritus electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson house of representatives ideological george clinton federalism department of education james smith rick scott chris murphy tom cotton thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism montesquieu john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst david perdue sherrod brown ben sasse tammy duckworth john cornyn mark warner abigail adams american experiment political commentary ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune electoral reform constitutional studies publius department of homeland security john hart bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis richard blumenthal separation of powers department of labor chris coons legal history american founding tammy baldwin thom tillis chris van hollen tina smith james lankford department of transportation summer institute richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono pat toomey judicial review mike braun social ethics jeff merkley patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases deliberative democracy historical analysis department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education lamar alexander cory gardner temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state george ross kevin cramer mike rounds cindy hyde smith revolutionary america apush department of commerce state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change founding era roger sherman early american republic martin heinrich maggie hassan constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen pat roberts john barrasso roger wicker william williams elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe william b allen constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee american political development samuel chase constitutional conventions alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation
The Holy Post
668: Pope Donald, Human Flourishing, & the Pastor's Wife with Beth Allison Barr

The Holy Post

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 93:30


The White House is facing backlash for posting an AI image of Donald Trump as the Pope. Was it a careless joke or a calculated distraction? The most extensive study of its kind finds that the world's largest Muslim country far outranks the United States in human flourishing, and also explains why secular elites are discovering a new respect for religion. But is there more than a practical purpose behind faith? Historian Beth Allison Barr is back to discuss her latest book, “Becoming the Pastor's Wife.” She says expectations for ministry spouses aren't rooted in Scripture but in a reaction to feminism in the late 20th century, and Barr explains how marriage replaced ordination as the way for women to serve the church. Also this week—listener questions, and a whole new look for Holy Post Media.   Holy Post Plus: Ad-Free Version of this Episode: https://www.patreon.com/posts/128303247/   Bonus Interview with Beth Allison Barr: https://www.patreon.com/posts/127935443/   0:00 - Show Starts   2:40 - Theme Song   3:00 - Sponsor - AG1 - Heavily researched, thoroughly purity-tested, and filled with stuff you need. Go to https://www.drinkag1.com/HOLYPOST   4:10 - Sponsor - Our Place - Go to https://www.fromourplace.com and use code HOLYPOST to get 10% off site wide on beautiful cookware!   15:10 - Comparing two recent interviews: Gillibrand and Kasich   28:10 - Pope Donald?   34:24 - Human Flourishing Study in Indonesia!   54:53 - Sponsor - Blueland - Get up to 25% off your first order by going to https://www.Blueland.com/HOLYPOST   56:00 - Sponsor - Glorify - Sign up for the #1 Christian Daily Devotional App to help you stay focused on God. Go to https://glorify-app.com/en/HOLYPOST to download the app today!   56:50 - Interview   1:02:24 - Danver's Statement   1:09:09 - Rooted in America, not Scripture   1:19:19 - Honoring Responsibility   1:32:55 - End Credits   Links from News Segment: Religion and Happiness in Indonesia: https://providencemag.com/2025/05/largest-longitudinal-study-of-human-flourishing-ever-shows-religions-importance/   Young People and Unhappiness: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/05/young-people-global-unhappiness/682632/   Tiktok Trend “Jesus Glow:” https://www.salon.com/2025/05/05/tiktoks-jesus-glow-trend-exposes-the-emptiness-of-social-media-religion/   Other Resources: Becoming the Pastor's Wife: How Marriage Replaced Ordination as a Woman's Path to Ministry by Beth Allison Barr: https://a.co/d/7kDNo1I   Holy Post website: https://www.holypost.com/   Holy Post Plus: www.holypost.com/plus   Holy Post Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/holypost   Holy Post Merch Store: https://www.holypost.com/shop   The Holy Post is supported by our listeners. We may earn affiliate commissions through links listed here. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.  

WBEN Extras
U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and other local leaders condemn President Trump's plan to eliminate the Head Start program across the country

WBEN Extras

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2025 15:44


U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and other local leaders condemn President Trump's plan to eliminate the Head Start program across the country full 944 Fri, 02 May 2025 14:15:00 +0000 oo6dWQvVmYfyavZ2g5UWqNCbSzLUUSxm buffalo,news,wben,trump administration,kirsten gillibrand,zeneta everhart,head start,crystal peoples-stokes WBEN Extras buffalo,news,wben,trump administration,kirsten gillibrand,zeneta everhart,head start,crystal peoples-stokes U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and other local leaders condemn President Trump's plan to eliminate the Head Start program across the country Archive of various reports and news events 2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc. News

The Constitutionalist
#57 - Tocqueville's Point of Departure

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 65:24


On the fifty-seventh episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane and Matthew discuss Volume 1, Chapter 2 of Alexis De Tocqueville's "Democracy in America." We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz departure public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott american democracy amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris american exceptionalism alexis de tocqueville thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate david perdue sherrod brown ben sasse tammy duckworth john cornyn mark warner abigail adams political commentary american experiment ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy legal analysis richard blumenthal separation of powers national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy thom tillis tammy baldwin american founding constitutionalism chris van hollen civic education tina smith james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey democracy in america benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester john morton mazie hirono pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles political education constitutional government charles carroll lamar alexander cory gardner temperance movement ben cardin antebellum america department of state kevin cramer george ross mike rounds cindy hyde smith revolutionary america department of commerce apush state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change founding era roger sherman early american republic martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy pat roberts john barrasso roger wicker william williams american political thought william floyd elbridge gerry george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution civic learning department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee constitutional affairs legal philosophy civic culture samuel chase constitutional conventions american political development alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance american political culture lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation
The Constitutionalist
#56 - Federalist 37

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 52:14


On the fifty-sixth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss Federalist 37, and Madison's teachings on political and epistemological limits. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse mark warner john cornyn tammy duckworth abigail adams american experiment political commentary ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune electoral reform constitutional studies legal education publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis separation of powers richard blumenthal department of labor national constitution center chris coons legal history department of energy american founding thom tillis tammy baldwin constitutionalism chris van hollen civic education tina smith james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll lamar alexander cory gardner ben cardin department of state kevin cramer george ross mike rounds cindy hyde smith revolutionary america apush department of commerce state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen pat roberts john barrasso roger wicker william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee constitutional affairs legal philosophy american political development samuel chase constitutional conventions richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Holy Post
665: Can Democrats Win Back Religious Voters? with Senator Kirsten Gillibrand

The Holy Post

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 89:16


It's Holy Week, and an article in the New York Times argues that Palm Sunday wasn't a worship procession; it was a protest march. With that theme in mind, Christians held peaceful rallies over the weekend in Philadelphia and San Diego to protest inhumane immigration enforcement policies, including the order allowing government agents into churches during worship gatherings to arrest people. Skye talks to Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) about how her faith informs her politics, what lessons the Democrats have learned from their losses in 2024, and why more religious Americans view her party's brand as “toxic.” Phil, Skye, and Kaitlyn then debrief the interview and discuss whether the Democrats' struggle is just messaging or something deeper. Also this week: the problem with purple. Holy Post Plus: Ad-Free Version of this Episode: https://www.patreon.com/posts/126742149/   0:00 - Show Starts   3:35 - Theme Song   3:55 - Sponsor - AG1 - Heavily researched, thoroughly purity-tested, and filled with stuff you need. Go to https://www.drinkag1.com/HOLYPOST   5:15 - Sponsor - Sundays Dog Food - Get 40% off your first order of Sundays. Go to https://www.SundaysForDogs.com/HOLYPOST or use code HOLYPOST at checkout.   7:15 - Purple Isn't Real?   17:40 - Christians Protesting ICE   25:05 - Was Palm Sunday a Protest?   34:50 - Why're We Interviewing a Senator?   36:00 - Sponsor - Public Good Generation - One week immersive program for high school students to https://www.ccpubliclife.org/high-school   37:00 - Sponsor - World Relief: The Path - Join a monthly giving community to help people all around the world! Go to https://www.worldrelief.org/stand   38:05 - Interview   43:50 - Is the Republican Party Faith-Driven?   53:05 - Is the Democratic Brand Toxic?   1:10:30 - Debrief   1:16:20 - Trump Administration Holy Week Statement   1:28:45 - End Credits   Links from News Segment: World Relief: https://www.worldrelief.com/advocate   Purple Isn't Real! https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/a64393667/purple-is-fake/   Faith Groups Protest Ice: https://religionnews.com/2025/04/07/pennsylvania-faith-groups-build-altar-at-ice-office-in-protest-of-immigration-arrests/?utm_medium=social   Palm Sunday was a Protest, Not a Procession: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/13/opinion/palm-sunday-protest.html?searchResultPosition=5   White House Presidential Holy Week Message https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/2025/04/presidential-message-on-holy-week-2025/ Other Resources: Holy Post website: https://www.holypost.com/   Holy Post Plus: www.holypost.com/plus   Holy Post Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/holypost   Holy Post Merch Store: https://www.holypost.com/shop   The Holy Post is supported by our listeners. We may earn affiliate commissions through links listed here. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.  

The Constitutionalist
#55 - Gouverneur Morris with Dennis C. Rasmussen

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 60:27


Purchase Professor Rasmussen's book here.We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com  The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org.The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.   

united states america american founders history president donald trump culture house politics college doctors phd colorado joe biden elections dc local congress political supreme court union bernie sanders democracy kamala harris blm constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal civil rights impeachment public policy amendment baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams political commentary american experiment ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education electoral reform john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis richard blumenthal separation of powers national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy thom tillis tammy baldwin american founding constitutionalism chris van hollen tina smith james lankford department of transportation summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester john morton mazie hirono pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander ben cardin department of state kevin cramer george ross mike rounds cindy hyde smith revolutionary america department of commerce apush state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen pat roberts john barrasso roger wicker william williams american political thought william floyd elbridge gerry george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution civic learning department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee constitutional affairs legal philosophy constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance dennis c rasmussen lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Brian Lehrer Show
Call Your Senator: Sen Gillibrand

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 28:30


Kirsten Gillibrand, U.S. Senator (D NY), talks about her work in Washington and more.

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast
Sen. Gillibrand Says Dems Are Fighting Trump, But Clickbait Media Won't Cover It

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 23:09


Every month, listeners have the opportunity to speak directly to their lawmakers.On Today's Show:U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D NY), talks about her work in Washington, and the struggle by Democrats to hold the media's attention in their opposition to the Trump administration.

The Wolf Of All Streets
Bitcoin's Big Moment: Senator Gillibrand's Plan To Lead The Crypto Industry Forward

The Wolf Of All Streets

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2025 31:22


We're sitting down again with Senator Kirsten Gillibrand on The Wolf Of All Streets to unpack the future of cryptocurrency regulation in the U.S. After years of uncertainty and setbacks, 2025 could finally see clear laws on stablecoins and crypto market structure. Join us to learn why regulation matters to every investor and how it could shape the future of finance. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand: https://x.com/SenGillibrand https://www.gillibrand.senate.gov/ ►► JOIN THE FREE WOLF DEN NEWSLETTER, DELIVERED EVERY WEEKDAY!

The Constitutionalist
#54 - Defending the Electoral College (Martin Diamond and Herbert Storing)

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2025 64:38


On the fifty-fourth episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss the arguments of Martin Diamond and Herbert Storing in favor of preserving the Electoral College, presented to the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Senate Judiciary Committee in July 1977. The readings may be accessed here: Martin Diamond: http://www.electoralcollegehistory.com/electoral/docs/diamond.pdf Herbert Storing (Chapter 21 in this volume): https://www.aei.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/-toward-a-more-perfect-union_154408483501.pdf?x85095 We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives diamond heritage nonprofits defending political science liberal civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington herbert princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin electoral college mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham storing bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties senate judiciary committee mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy subcommittee tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon senate hearings constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams political commentary american experiment ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune legal education electoral reform constitutional studies publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis separation of powers richard blumenthal national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy tammy baldwin thom tillis american founding constitutionalism chris van hollen civic education tina smith james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester john morton mazie hirono pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow deliberative democracy american constitution society historical analysis george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles political education constitutional government charles carroll cory gardner lamar alexander david nichols ben cardin department of state george ross kevin cramer mike rounds cindy hyde smith revolutionary america apush department of commerce state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change founding era roger sherman early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy pat roberts john barrasso roger wicker william williams american political thought william floyd elbridge gerry george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center living constitution civic learning department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee constitutional affairs legal philosophy american political development samuel chase constitutional conventions richard stockton mike crapo government structure department of health and human services american governance lyman hall constitutional conservatism constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
NYC NOW
Evening Roundup: Gillibrand Condemns Trump's Plan to Close Social Security Offices, NYC's Outdoor Dining Program and the Fight Against a Casino Developer on Coney Island

NYC NOW

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 10:18


In White Plains, the federal government is ending its lease on a social security office, calling it a cost-saving measure. Plus, outdoor dining kicks off next month but many restaurants won't be participating. And finally, some locals fear a plan to build a casino and entertainment complex on Coney Island puts much of its history and the neighborhood's quirky charm at risk.

The Constitutionalist
#53 - Lincoln's Temperance Address

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 61:40


On the fifty-third episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew discuss Lincoln's famous "Temperance Address," delivered on Washington's birthday in 1842 to the Washington Society in Springfield, Illinois. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast co-hosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history president donald trump culture power house washington politics college state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local illinois congress political supreme court senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm address constitution conservatives heritage nonprofits political science liberal abraham lincoln civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor springfield george washington princeton university american history presidency ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell baylor university supreme court justice american politics joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott temperance federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice political theory bob menendez political philosophy john witherspoon constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins patrick henry john marshall 14th amendment political history benedict arnold chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones social activism john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate sherrod brown david perdue ben sasse mark warner john cornyn tammy duckworth abigail adams american experiment political commentary ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis separation of powers richard blumenthal national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy thom tillis tammy baldwin constitutionalism chris van hollen civic education tina smith james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey judicial review mike braun john dickinson social ethics jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow american constitution society historical analysis george taylor department of veterans affairs civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll lamar alexander cory gardner ben cardin temperance movement antebellum america department of state george ross mike rounds kevin cramer cindy hyde smith apush department of commerce brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe constitutional change gouverneur morris roger sherman contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan constitutional advocacy jeanne shaheen john barrasso pat roberts roger wicker william williams american political thought elbridge gerry william floyd george wythe jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee constitutional affairs legal philosophy samuel chase constitutional conventions alcohol prohibition richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance lyman hall washington society constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
The Constitutionalist
#52 - Texas Annexation - Adding the Lone Star with Jordan Cash

The Constitutionalist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 66:19


On the fifty-second episode of the Constitutionalist, Shane, Ben, and Matthew are joined by Jordan Cash, Assistant Professor at the James Madison College at Michigan State University, to discuss Texas's declaration of independence from Mexico, and its annexation by the United States. We want to hear from you! Constitutionalistpod@gmail.com The Constitutionalist is proud to be sponsored by the Jack Miller Center for Teaching America's Founding Principles and History. For the last twenty years, JMC has been working to preserve and promote that tradition through a variety of programs at the college and K-12 levels. Through their American Political Tradition Project, JMC has partnered with more than 1,000 scholars at over 300 college campuses across the country, especially through their annual Summer Institutes for graduate students and recent PhDs. The Jack Miller Center is also working with thousands of K-12 educators across the country to help them better understand America's founding principles and history and teach them effectively, to better educate the next generation of citizens. JMC has provided thousands of hours of professional development for teachers all over the country, reaching millions of students with improved civic learning. If you care about American education and civic responsibility, you'll want to check out their work, which focuses on reorienting our institutions of learning around America's founding principles. To learn more or get involved, visit jackmillercenter.org. The Constitutionalist is a podcast cohosted by Professor Benjamin Kleinerman, the RW Morrison Professor of Political Science at Baylor University and Founder and Editor of The Constitutionalist Blog, Shane Leary, a graduate student at Baylor University, and Dr. Matthew Reising, a John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Princeton University. Each week, they discuss political news in light of its constitutional implications, and explore a unique constitutional topic, ranging from the thoughts and experiences of America's founders and statesmen, historical episodes, and the broader philosophic ideas that influence the American experiment in government.

united states america american university founders history texas president donald trump culture power house washington politics college mexico state doctors phd professor colorado joe biden elections washington dc dc local congress political supreme court union senate bernie sanders democracy federal kamala harris blm constitution conservatives assistant professor heritage nonprofits michigan state university political science liberal civil rights impeachment public policy amendment graduate baylor george washington princeton university american history presidency sherman ballot ted cruz public affairs elizabeth warren ideology constitutional thomas jefferson founding fathers mitt romney benjamin franklin mitch mcconnell declaration of independence baylor university supreme court justice american politics alamo lone star joe manchin john adams rand paul marco rubio polarization chuck schumer alexander hamilton cory booker james madison lindsey graham bill of rights tim scott federalist amy klobuchar civic engagement dianne feinstein rule of law john kennedy civil liberties mike lee claremont josh hawley polarized supreme court decisions ron johnson constitutional law paul revere house of representatives ideological george clinton manifest destiny constitutional rights federalism department of education james smith aaron burr rick scott chris murphy tom cotton robert morris thomas paine kirsten gillibrand department of justice sam houston political theory bob menendez john witherspoon political philosophy constitutional convention constitutional amendments fourteenth john hancock susan collins annexation patrick henry 14th amendment political history benedict arnold davy crockett chuck grassley department of defense american government aei samuel adams marsha blackburn john quincy adams james wilson john paul jones john jay tim kaine political discourse dick durbin jack miller political thought joni ernst political debate david perdue sherrod brown ben sasse tammy duckworth mark warner john cornyn abigail adams political commentary american experiment ed markey checks and balances grad student ron wyden american presidency originalism michael bennet john thune constitutional studies legal education publius john hart department of homeland security bill cassidy political analysis legal analysis richard blumenthal separation of powers national constitution center department of labor chris coons legal history department of energy tammy baldwin thom tillis american founding constitutionalism chris van hollen tina smith civic education james lankford summer institute stephen hopkins richard burr war powers rob portman texas history constitutionalists bob casey benjamin harrison angus king department of agriculture jon tester mazie hirono john morton pat toomey judicial review mike braun texas revolution jeff merkley benjamin rush patrick leahy todd young jmc gary peters landmark cases debbie stabenow historical analysis department of veterans affairs george taylor civic responsibility civic leadership demagoguery samuel huntington founding principles constitutional government political education charles carroll lamar alexander cory gardner ben cardin department of state mike rounds george ross kevin cramer cindy hyde smith revolutionary america department of commerce apush state sovereignty brian schatz founding documents civic participation jim inhofe gouverneur morris constitutional change mexican history founding era early american republic contemporary politics martin heinrich maggie hassan jeanne shaheen constitutional advocacy john barrasso pat roberts roger wicker william williams american political thought william floyd elbridge gerry texas independence george wythe james madison college jacky rosen mercy otis warren constitutional accountability center civic learning living constitution texians department of the interior tom carper richard henry lee james bowie constitutional affairs legal philosophy constitutional conventions american political development samuel chase richard stockton mike crapo department of health and human services government structure american governance texas republic lyman hall constitutional rights foundation constitutional literacy
X22 Report
You Are Witnessing The Final Battle Of The Insurgence, Fraud Vitiates Everything – Ep. 3596

X22 Report

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2025 69:22


Watch The X22 Report On Video No videos found Click On Picture To See Larger Picture Germany is moving forward with the climate hoax, the people around the world will see the difference between a country that has energy and one that does not. Everything the President puts into place must be made permanent. The [DS] is fighting back and what you are witnessing is the insurgency, this is their final battle. Trump has created a counterinsurgency to battle and counter everything the [DS] is trying to do. Trump is building the narrative that Biden's EO and pardons are null and void because the [DS] used an autopen. In the end fraud vitiates everything.   (function(w,d,s,i){w.ldAdInit=w.ldAdInit||[];w.ldAdInit.push({slot:13499335648425062,size:[0, 0],id:"ld-7164-1323"});if(!d.getElementById(i)){var j=d.createElement(s),p=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];j.async=true;j.src="//cdn2.customads.co/_js/ajs.js";j.id=i;p.parentNode.insertBefore(j,p);}})(window,document,"script","ld-ajs"); Economy https://twitter.com/disclosetv/status/1900873094148796675 https://twitter.com/KobeissiLetter/status/1900630258845708750  sales fell -9.2% in the South, the biggest home-selling region in the US, marking the largest decline since 2020. Meanwhile, 1 in 7 contract signings were canceled in January, the highest share on record for this time of year, according to Redfin. Extremely high housing costs and economic uncertainty are behind recent market weakness. Home-buying conditions have rarely been worse. https://twitter.com/KobeissiLetter/status/1900991208505369030  secondary part-time job spiked 395,000 in February, to a record 5.37 million. This reflects 3.3% of total employment, the highest percentage since 1999. All while part-time workers for economic reasons jumped 460,000 last month, to 4.94 million, the highest since May 2021. Millions of Americans are working multiple jobs to afford basic necessities. BREAKING: Government Funding Bill Passes Key Senate Vote – Nine Dems Vote Yes The continuing resolution to keep the government funded and avert a government shutdown tonight at midnight has passed a key procedural vote in the Senate, and it will now see a final Senate floor vote.  Now that the Senate has taken this procedural vote, the chamber will vote on four amendments to the government funding bill and then take a final passage vote on the measure. These are the members of the Democratic caucus who voted to advance the measure: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin Senate Democratic Chief Deputy Whip Brian Schatz Sen. Kristen Gillibrand (the chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee) Sen. Maggie Hassan Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto Sen. John Fetterman Sen. Gary Peters Sen. Jeanne Shaheen Sen. Angus King (an independent who caucuses with Democrats) Source: thegatewaypundit.com Trump's Tax Cuts and Jobs Act must be made permanent  Congress must put everything into law. Federal reserve act must be removed 16th amendment must be removed. Source: wnd.com Political/Rights AOC Responds to Kyrsten Sinema Calling Out Her Hypocrisy, and She Really Shouldn't Have  After spending four years calling the Senate filibuster a "Jim Crow relic" and a "tool of segregationists," Democrats lined up on Friday to demand its use to stop a Trump-backed continuing resolution. As RedState reported, that incredible hypocrisy caught the eye of former Senator Kyrsten Sinema. https://twitter.com/kyrstensinema/status/1900835811660362044?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1900835811660362044%7Ctwgr%5Ea638b7a2847bf0faa2c9949962ee0f9a8b731747%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fredstate.com%2Fbonchie%2F2025%2F03%2F15%2Faoc-responds-to-kyrsten-sinema-calling-out-her-hypocrisy-and-she-really-shouldnt-have-n2186708

Trend Lines
Hegseth's Patriarchal Vision Will Make the U.S. Military Less Effective

Trend Lines

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 9:19


In a major and unprecedented shakeup to the U.S. military's leadership, U.S. President Donald Trump removed Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Charles Brown in late February, while announcing his intention to replace Adm. Lisa Franchetti, the head of the U.S. Navy. The personnel changes have been framed as part of an effort to eradicate "woke ideology" from the U.S. military. It is not a coincidence, then, that Brown is Black and Franchetti is the first woman ever to command a U.S. military service branch. But the Trump administration's attack on efforts to address historical injustices for minorities and women - known as Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, or DEI, initiatives - goes beyond purging people of color and high-ranking women officers from the chain of command. As part of this agenda, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has also proposed a radical departure from the U.S. military's approach over the past decade. Though a slow-moving institution that is far from progressive, the Defense Department has undertaken a series of reforms to be more representative of the country it serves. That has included things like adopting a plan to implement the Women, Peace and Security Agenda, updating its harassment policies and protecting its employees from discrimination. Since taking over as defense secretary in late January, Hegseth has articulated his commitment to "restoring the warrior ethos, rebuilding our military, and reestablishing deterrence." Along those lines, he announced the creation of a Restoring America's Fighting Force Task Force charged with "overseeing the Department's efforts to abolish DEI offices and any vestiges of such offices that subvert meritocracy, perpetuate unconstitutional discrimination, and promote radical ideologies related to systemic racism and gender fluidity." This task force and other envisaged reforms are all aimed at eradicating "wokeness" from the U.S. military and Defense Department. This agenda reflects Hegseth's retrograde and patriarchal vision of the U.S. military. But his justifications for all of these measures are often invented or based on false premises. These misrepresentations are aimed at portraying the U.S. military as hamstrung by politically correct overreach. In both his public comments and his highly critical book about the U.S. military, Hegseth has castigated "woke" generals and policies that, he argues, undermine the military's effectiveness. For example, during his Senate confirmation hearings in January, Hegseth cited personal interviews conducted while writing his book to assert that commanders are expected to "meet quotas" in order to increase the number of women in the ranks. That practice, he added, was one of many "direct, indirect, overt and subtle" ways that the U.S. military has changed its standards to accommodate women recruits. Hegseth had previously asserted that women should not be present in ground combat operations, stating in November, "It hasn't made us more effective. Hasn't made us more lethal. Has made fighting more complicated." Hegseth's statements make it seem as if women have been coddled by the military in order to goose their numbers, to the detriment of readiness. Hegseth's remarks play well to Trump's base, but they aren't just for public consumption. They have real implications for the well-being of U.S. servicewomen, as well as for women in countries where the U.S. military is active. On both counts, however, he is demonstrably wrong. As Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand pointed out during his confirmation hearing, there are no quotas for women in the infantry. That is a politically expedient lie for Hegseth and his allies. With regard to standards, for instance, retired Army Lt. Col. Ellen Haring told NPR, "Not only have standards not been lowered, but when they first decided that … they were going to open combat jobs to women, the services were given three years to actually set standards because up until that point in time, standards had...

The Majority Report with Sam Seder
2448 - Is Trump Crashing The Economy?; NYC Organizes For Rent Freeze w/ Hal Singer, Cea Weaver

The Majority Report with Sam Seder

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 76:38


It's an EmMajority Report Thursday! She speaks with Hal Singer, economics professor at the University of Utah, to discuss Trump's recent tariff threats. Then, she speaks with Cea Weaver, tenant organizer with Housing Justice For All and director of the New York State Tenant Bloc, to discuss the rent freeze campaign the organizations are working on. First, Emma runs through updates on the US' devastating jobs numbers as Trump plans to cut more federal workers, DOJ's threat to USAID workers, the dropping stock market, Trump's attack on the DOE, the GOP's attack on Medicaid, the censuring of Al Green, Senate Dems' decision to overturn Biden's crypto regulations, Trump's attacks on Ukrainian refugees and Gaza, Smotrich's visit to Washington, and Barnes and Noble's big labor wins, before watching James Comer attempt to discipline Ayanna Pressley for… submitting evidence about migrant lawfulness. Professor Hal Singer then joins, jumping right into an assessment of the “chaos and anxiety” spurred by the Trump Administration's economic and employment policies of destroying the federal government, and the long-term ramifications of straight up deleting financial protections for Americans, before shifting to the topic of Trump's indiscriminate tariffs, and his guiding strategy in all negotiations (domestic or foreign) of all stick-no carrot. After expanding on the shady relationship between Trump and his Big Tech crypto backers – particularly in the wake of an announced crypto reserve – and the dearth of economic theory to back his ongoing agenda, Professor Singer wraps up by highlighting the Democratic Party's need to return to policies centered on uplifting the working class' economic and labor power. Next, Cea Weaver and Emma dive deep into the ongoing push for a rent freeze for NYC's nearly one million rent-stabilized units, walking through the role it has already played among the Democratic primary in this year's Mayoral race, with myriad candidates coming out in support of a data-backed plan to reverse the tide of overwhelming rent inflation that has been, and threatens to continue to push out native, working-class New Yorkers. After expanding on the diverse and expansive coalition of constituents involved in this fight, and exploring how, exactly, rent-stabilized units are hit by rent inflation (hint: Andrew Cuomo), Weaver wraps up with a final assessment of the current state of the NYC Mayoral race, and what a ranked ballot could look like. And in the Fun Half: Emma is joined by Matt Binder as they work through an early assessment of 2028 Democratic hopefuls in the wake of Gov. Gavin Newsome's insane decision to debut his podcast via an amicable interview with Charlie Kirk, Kowalski from Nebraska gives an in-depth agricultural and economic update, and John from Montreal unpacks the torpedoing trust and approval of the United States abroad. The MR Team also watches noted crypto hawk Kirsten Gillibrand refuse to condemn Andrew Cuomo, and dissects the censuring of Al Green with ten Democrats voting across party lines, plus, your calls and IMs! Follow Hal on Twitter here: https://x.com/HalSinger Follow Cea on Twitter here: https://x.com/ceaweaver Find out more about Housing Justice For All here: https://housingjusticeforall.org/ Find out more about the New York State Tenant Bloc here: https://tenantbloc.org/ Find out more about the Stand Up For Science rally tomorrow!: https://standupforscience2025.org/ Become a member at JoinTheMajorityReport.com: https://fans.fm/majority/join Follow us on TikTok here!: https://www.tiktok.com/@majorityreportfm Check us out on Twitch here!: https://www.twitch.tv/themajorityreport Find our Rumble stream here!: https://rumble.com/user/majorityreport Check out our alt YouTube channel here!: https://www.youtube.com/majorityreportlive Gift a Majority Report subscription here: https://fans.fm/majority/gift Subscribe to the ESVN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/esvnshow Subscribe to the AMQuickie newsletter here: https://am-quickie.ghost.io/ Join the Majority Report Discord! https://majoritydiscord.com/ Get all your MR merch at our store: https://shop.majorityreportradio.com/ Get the free Majority Report App!: https://majority.fm/app Go to https://JustCoffee.coop and use coupon code majority to get 10% off your purchase! Check out today's sponsors: Babbel: Let's get more of you talking in a new language. Babbel is gifting our listeners 60% off subscriptions at https://Babbel.com/MAJORITY.  Get up to 60% off at https://Babbel.com/MAJORITY. Rules and restrictions may apply. Beautiful Day Granola: Beautiful Day is offering Free Shipping for all Majority Report listeners when you go to https://beautifuldayri.org and USE code MAJORITY (all caps) at Checkout until March 7. Follow the Majority Report crew on Twitter: @SamSeder @EmmaVigeland @MattLech @BradKAlsop Check out Matt's show, Left Reckoning, on Youtube, and subscribe on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/leftreckoning Check out Matt Binder's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/mattbinder Subscribe to Brandon's show The Discourse on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/ExpandTheDiscourse Check out Ava Raiza's music here! https://avaraiza.bandcamp.com/ The Majority Report with Sam Seder - https://majorityreportradio.com/

On Brand with Donny Deutsch
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand: We Should Be Listening More Than Talking

On Brand with Donny Deutsch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 37:11


In this conversation, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) discusses various political topics, including her analysis of Trump's recent speech, the impact of tariffs on the economy, and the strategies Democrats need to adopt to win back voters. She emphasizes the importance of addressing key issues such as public safety, support for Israel, and the need for a two-state solution in the Middle East. Gillibrand also highlights the challenges of anti-Semitism on college campuses and the necessity for Democrats to communicate effectively with constituents about their concerns. Be sure to check out the On Brand with Donny Deutsch YouTube page. There you will find all of Donny's conversations in video form. Takeaways: Trump's speech was divisive and ignored middle-class issues. Tariffs will significantly raise costs for American families. Democrats must listen to constituents to address their needs. Public safety and economic issues are crucial for voter outreach. Winning back voters requires focusing on everyday concerns. Support for Israel remains a priority for many Democrats. A two-state solution is still a viable option for peace. Anti-Semitism on campuses needs to be addressed urgently. Democrats must prioritize effective communication strategies. It's too early to predict the 2028 elections; focus is on 2026. Chapters 01:05 Analysis of Trump's Speech 04:07 Impact of Tariffs on the Economy 06:58 Democratic Strategies and Challenges 10:01 Winning Back Voters and Key Issues 13:51 Foreign Policy and National Security 16:05 Support for Israel and Jewish Concerns 20:08 Two-State Solution and Middle East Peace 25:05 Addressing Anti-Semitism and Campus Safety 28:00 Democratic Messaging and Inclusivity 32:56 Looking Ahead to 2028 Elections Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Brian Lehrer Show
Call Your Senator: Sen. Gillibrand on Trump 2.0

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 28:34


 U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D NY) responds to the actions of the Trump administration  so far, when and how Democratic in the Senate can push back, and other matters affecting New Yorkers and the country.

Hysteria
Can the ERA Survive Trump? w. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand

Hysteria

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 59:37


Senator Kirsten Gillibrand joins Hysteria to talk about the future of the Equal Rights Amendment under Trump, her goals for her role as chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, and honor the memory of Cecile Richards. Erin and Alyssa also review Trump's executive orders from his first days in office and question if any of them will actually improve the economy (spoiler alert: they won't).Tracking Trump's executive orders: What he's signed so far (Axios 1/21)What Trump supporters believe and expect (Pew 11/13)Biden Proclaims That The Equal Rights Amendment Is The Law Of The Land—But What Does That Mean? (Vanity Fair 1/18)

The Megyn Kelly Show
Megyn Kelly's Instant Analysis of Pete Hegseth Hearing and Dem Absurdity, with Michael Knowles, Dakota Meyer, and Rob O'Neill | Ep. 982

The Megyn Kelly Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 61:49


Megyn Kelly opens the show live from Washington, D.C. after attending Pete Hegseth's confirmation hearing by discussing what she observed, why she thinks Hegseth will be confirmed easily, and the terrible performance by Democratic women. Then The Daily Wire's Michael Knowles, host of The Michael Knowles Show, to talk about Senator Tim Kaine's outrageous questions to Hegseth during the confirmation hearing on domestic violence and assault allegations, his hypocrisy after campaigning with Bill Clinton and Doug Emhoff, Sen. Mazie Hirono's embarrassing questions of Hegseth, the screechy performance by Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, and more. Then military veterans Dakota Meyer and Rob O'Neill join to give their perspective on Hegseth's confirmation hearing, the terrible treatment of Hegseth by Democratic senators, the way he was able to push back against the questions, the challenges the military is facing including wokeness, the need for real accountability for leadership failures, Hegseth's unique perspective, and more.Knowles- https://www.dailywire.com/Meyer- https://dakotameyer.com/O'Neill- https://rjoapparel.com/Home Title Lock: Go to https://HomeTitleLock.com/megynkelly and use promo code MEGYN to get a 30-day FREE trial of Triple Lock Protection and a FREE title history report!Tax Network USA: https://TNUSA.com/MEGYNByrna: Get 10% Off at https://Byrna.com/MegynFollow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow

Hysteria
It Ends With Us Legal Fight Begins

Hysteria

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 70:16


Erin and Alyssa break down the legal saga unfolding between Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni over the misconduct that happened on the set of It Ends With Us and the smear campaign that followed. They also discuss a historic breakthrough in the fight against medical debt, Meta's twisted new hate speech policies, and how Democrats should deal with conservative BS in 2025. ‘We Can Bury Anyone': Inside a Hollywood Smear Machine (NY Times 12/21)A Timeline of Blake Lively's Legal Dispute With Justin Baldoni (Vogue 1/2)Gillibrand to head Senate Democrats' campaign arm (The Hill 1/6)Medical debt will be erased from credit reports for all Americans under new federal rule (The 19th 12/7)For Harris, an Awkward Election Task: Certifying the Vote She Lost (NYT 1/6)Facebook lifts restrictions on calling women ‘property' and transgender people ‘freaks' (The Independent 1/7)

Hysteria
On The Gaetz Day of Christmas

Hysteria

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2024 61:04


For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast. Supreme Court to hear challenge to banning TikTok in U.S. (Washington Post 12/18)In reversal, key House panel votes to release Matt Gaetz ethics report (CNN 12/18)The House has its committee chairs. Here's what the selection means (Punch Bowl News 12/13)Gillibrand Presses Biden to Amend the Constitution to Enshrine Sex Equality (NYT 12/13)Texas' abortion pill lawsuit against New York doctor marks new challenge to interstate telemedicine (Politico 12/14)Postpartum depression is costing the United States billions. Can cities help? (The 19th 12/9)