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This week on the Mark Levin Show, President-Elect Trump had a great press conference. It was over an hour, and he weaved through different subjects with ease. The difference between Trump and President Biden is like night and day. The Loudoun County school system seems to be under the iron fist of the radical left. The local NAACP is angry after a teacher passed around some cotton during a history lesson on slavery and the invention of the cotton gin. You can’t pass cotton around as an example of what was produced and what took place in the South? Is this a joke? It’s nice to see the fight in Congress over spending, but they are fighting over discretionary spending which is a small percentage of the budget. Continuing resolutions are important, but in the big scheme, they are nothing. The sky will not fall if there's a government shutdown. The government was shut down over 20 times since 1974 and the nation survived. A shutdown does draw a line on what they call "discretionary spending" -- the government itself calls it non-essential spending -- much of which, but not all, funds ideologically driven projects.
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By Cumulus Podcast Network4.6
2205422,054 ratings
This week on the Mark Levin Show, President-Elect Trump had a great press conference. It was over an hour, and he weaved through different subjects with ease. The difference between Trump and President Biden is like night and day. The Loudoun County school system seems to be under the iron fist of the radical left. The local NAACP is angry after a teacher passed around some cotton during a history lesson on slavery and the invention of the cotton gin. You can’t pass cotton around as an example of what was produced and what took place in the South? Is this a joke? It’s nice to see the fight in Congress over spending, but they are fighting over discretionary spending which is a small percentage of the budget. Continuing resolutions are important, but in the big scheme, they are nothing. The sky will not fall if there's a government shutdown. The government was shut down over 20 times since 1974 and the nation survived. A shutdown does draw a line on what they call "discretionary spending" -- the government itself calls it non-essential spending -- much of which, but not all, funds ideologically driven projects.
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