Big news this week on climate change. President Obama and http://www.martinezmultimarca.com/comprar-sildenafil-sin-receta/ Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to limit their countries’ carbon emissions. Many have hailed the agreement as a breakthrough, but some in Congress worry that it would hurt the U.S. economy for no discernable effect on the http://www.survivingtherapistabuse.com/zithromax-no-prescription-needed/ climate. How big is this deal, and how much should we trust Washington and Beijing to make good on their promises to reduce emissions?
Earlier this week, President Obama made a surprise move by weighing in on the contentious issue of net neutrality. The president urged the Federal Communications Commission to regulate Internet service providers as telecommunications companies. This would subject them to government regulation, including the so-called “net neutrality” rule. But critics of the rule say that it would stifle innovation and subject the internet to heavy-handed government bureaucracy.
Finally, there was a major revelation about Obamacare this week. Video emerged of MIT professor Jonathan Gruber, one of the principal architects of the law, saying that Obamacare was deliberately designed to confuse the American people, whom he called “stupid.” Gruber later said he regretted his remarks, but opponents of the law seized on them, saying they proved what they have been saying about Obamacare since the http://territorioscriativos.pt/prescripcion-de-propecia/ beginning. Do Gruber’s remarks fit the definition of a gaffe–saying the truth at an inopportune time?
Nick Brana of SocioEvolved.com, political consultant Marcio Coimbra, and Al Mattei of TopoftheCircle.com will discuss these issues and more.






