John Stossel, Dinesh D’Souza, Ben Shapiro, Michael Knowles, Andrew Klavan
PAY FOR YOUR OWN CHOICES: Andrew Klavan 100% SHREDS socialist redistribution.
More Free Stuff 2020
Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/_I_glE1X10w
John Stossel
Last year, we added up all the candidates' spending plans. Since then, they've proposed so much additional spending that we had to do a new videoWe break the spending plans into four categories: Education, Welfare, Environment, and... a “Grab-bag” section. First, Education: Joe Biden wants free community college, to cut student debt in half, to increase Pell Grants, “modernize" schools, create government-funded pre-K, and hire school psychologists. In total, Biden would increase spending by $157 billion every year. Yet he's the "moderate"! Compared to most others, he is. Pete Buttigieg would spend $178 billion a year on similar programs. His plan is nothing compared to Elizabeth Warren's. She'd eliminate nearly all student debt, impose universal childcare, and quadruple spending for low-income schools. $277 billion. Bernie Sanders would eliminate ALL student debt, even for the rich. That alone would cost $220 billion a year. Add in $60 billion for free childcare and pre-k, and $15 billion for black colleges, Sanders’ wants to increase education spending by $295 billion. That’s just education. In total, two candidates want to increase spending by several TRILLION dollars! Who’s the worst? Who is least bad? For the other rounds, and to see the final winner, see the video above. !
-------- Don't miss a single video from Stossel TV, sign up here: https://johnstossel.activehosted.com/f/1 ---------
Everything on Demand
https://youtu.be/kIvoWK_GVGQ
John Stossel
Competition makes entertainment better and cheaper. -------- Don't miss a single video from Stossel TV, sign up here: https://johnstossel.activehosted.com/f/1 --------- “Reporters always complain about business. We rarely cover good things businesses do -- the constant improvements that happen slowly,” says John Stossel. Fortunately, a new video essay by Sean Malone of the Foundation for Economic Education does exactly that. He shows the limited options for entertainment we had during his childhood and how “now just about anything I've ever wanted to watch is available at the click of a button.” Why did this happen? “The astounding wealth of home entertainment options we have today are the result of entrepreneurial start-ups.” The video explains that 20 years ago, “Blockbuster dominate[d] the rental video space... but tack[ed] on substantial fees for returning movies late ... $40 in late fees at Blockbuster annoyed Reed Hastings enough to start a new subscription-based company built around mail-order movie rentals with no late fees, called Netflix.” By 2005, the video notes, Blockbuster had lost 75% of its market share. Stossel says, “There is an economics lesson in that. When entrepreneurs face competition, they may lose, but the fight makes life better for almost all of us. Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter explained how that works.” “He introduced the term "Creative Destruction" as a defining feature of free market economies … older companies like Blockbuster have to become more innovative themselves or be destroyed by their competition. This process is how our standards of living continually increase,” says Malone. “We see this in most every industry. Think how much our phones have changed,” Stossel continues. “… Competition drove innovation. We got the blackberry, then the iPhone … Now we have budget smartphones that are even better.” Stossel adds, “Of course, not every new idea is a good one. That’s why markets and prices are important. Prices are not just money, they’re information. They tell us where to put our money.” The FEE video explains, “This is the biggest reason why trying to centrally plan an economy just doesn't work. Politicians and bureaucrats don't know what people are going to value.” Don’t monopolies stop progress? In 2007, Netflix had what some people claimed was a monopoly over streaming. But that monopoly disappeared almost as soon as it formed. “ … Jeff Bezos ... launched a small movie streaming app called Amazon Unbox. A year later, NBC Universal decided to put its big library of content into a new service called Hulu … Other companies caught up real fast,” says Malone. When Malone was a kid, a basic cable package cost about $73 (adjusted for inflation). “Now we get much more choice for 1/10 th the price," adds Stossel. “None of this was the result of any kind of grand, coordinated political plan. It’s something that could only happen in a market economy,” says Malone, “Disney+ is amazing. So is Netflix. And Hulu, and Amazon Prime. And they're all getting better and better.” “As long as politicians don't do something stupid, the future looks really good,” Malone concludes.
Second Chance DENIED
https://youtu.be/hHC4gyStlds
John Stossel
Government rules often ban people with years-old misdemeanors from working. -------- Don't miss a single video from Stossel TV, sign up here: https://johnstossel.activehosted.com/f/1 --------- Thousands of state laws make it hard for people to turn their life around. Courtney Haveman was an alcoholic when she was young -- she got arrested for a DUI and also for drunkenly hitting a security guard in a casino. She pled guilty to misdemeanors. Years later, she went to beauty school to turn her life around. She had to pay thousands of dollars, and take more than a thousand hours to get the state license. "I really like skin. I finally found something I was passionate about," she tells John Stossel. But when she applied for her license, the form had a box asking if she'd ever been convicted of anything. "I clicked yes, because that's the truth," Haveman tells John Stossel. The bureaucrats then said she'd have to prove she had "good moral character." She and others who knew her wrote character letters to the Pennsylvania State Board of Cosmetology. But they declined her application anyway. Andrew Ward, a lawyer with the Institute for Justice, says such laws are outrageous and unconstitutional -- and make the country less safe by making it harder for people to become productive. The Institute for Justice filed suit on behalf of Courtney and other women in similar situations. The stated purpose of the law is to protect "public health and safety." But it doesn't do that! Learn why in above video.
DINESH D'SOUZA ROASTS AOC: Her socialism is more like Venezuela than Scandinavia.
https://youtu.be/ZvflkfoCMiM
YAFTV
"The Scandinavian model is very simple: everyone benefits, and everyone has to pay." Dinesh D'Souza bursts the Left's bubble about Scandinavian socialism. --- Watch more #onlyatYAF videos every day! Click now to connect with us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/youngamericasfoun...
FROM NEW YORK TO NORTHAM: Knowles hits the Left over barbaric abortion policies
https://youtu.be/9ra-zquQoT8
YAFTV
Privileged, white leftists like Andrew Cuomo and Ralph Northam sit back and smile while a genocide is taking place against black babies in the womb. Michael Knowles TAKES NO PRISONERS in the fight for life. --- Watch more #onlyatYAF videos every day! Click now to connect with us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/youngamericasfoun...
Michael Knowles TEARS INTO the Left over their racism & bigotry
https://youtu.be/TkKiZHkQ2Vk
YAFTV
The Left wants us to believe that conservatives hate minorities. Nothing could be further from the truth. Michael Knowles explains how we can beat this leftist propaganda once and for all. --- Watch more #onlyatYAF videos every day! Click now to connect with us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/youngamericasfoun...
Hot Air on the Hill
Watch this video at- https://youtu.be/FdRUTtujROI
John Stossel
Politicians use congressional hearings to score cheap points and bully productive people. -------- Don't miss a single video from Stossel TV, sign up here: https://johnstossel.activehosted.com/f/1 --------- Congressional hearings date back to the first congress in 1789, and they're supposed to educate lawmakers. But now hearings are more about scoring points. In the recent impeachment hearings, Rep. Adam Schiff shouted at least five times, "Gentleman is not recognized!" to shut down opposition points. Republicans are ridiculous, too. Some should wish they’d been shut down. Several years ago, Sen. Orrin Hatch asked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg the silly question: "How do you sustain a business model in which users don't pay for your service?" After a pause, Zuckerberg responded, "Senator, we run ads." Hatch couldn't figure that out on his own? Rep. Al Green interrogated Zuckerberg about groups that Facebook partners with to create a new cryptocurrency. “How many are headed by women?" Green demanded. "Congressman, I do not know the answer," Zuckerberg replied. "How many of them are minorities, Mr. Zuckerberg? ... Are there any members of the LGBTQ+ community?" Republican Steve King complained to Google's CEO about what his granddaughter saw on an iPhone. He demanded, "how does that show up on a seven year old's iPhone, who's playing a kid's game?" he asked. "Congressman, the iPhone is made by a different company," Google's CEO had to tell King. John Stossel invites you to send in your favorite examples of politicians revealing themselves.
Watch Elizabeth Warren Lie About Her Son's Private School Education
https://youtu.be/xopibfXRIhA
ReasonTV
Political hypocrisy on school choice needs to be exposed, says Reason Foundation's Corey DeAngelis. Subscribe to our YouTube channel: http://youtube.com/reasontv Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reason.Magaz... Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/reason Subscribe to our podcast at Apple Podcasts: https://goo.gl/az3a7a Should politicians be held accountable for being hypocrites about education policy? At least one leading Democratic presidential candidate, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, wants to make it harder for parents to exercise school choice even though she sent one of her children to elite private schools. When Warren delivered a speech at a campaign event in Atlanta last November, charter school supporters showed up to make their voices heard. Warren is an outspoken critic of charters, which are publicly funded schools that operate with more freedom (and less taxpayer money per pupil) than traditional K-12 institutions. The Massachusetts senator's education platform calls for ending federal funding of charters, increasing regulations for them, and making it more difficult to open new ones. Sarah Carpenter, a grandmother and school choice activist who had traveled six hours from Memphis to attend the event, later confronted Warren backstage in a filmed exchange that went viral: Carpenter: "I read that your children went to private schools." Warren: "No, my children went to public schools." The clip went viral because Warren wasn't telling the truth. Corey DeAngelis, the director of school choice at Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes this website), had discovered through online sleuthing that Warren's son Alex, now 43, had attended Kirby Hall, an elite private school in Austin, Texas. It subsequently came out that Alex had also attended the Haverford School, a tony all-boys academy outside Philadelphia. Yet Warren's educational platform would make it more difficult for low- and middle-income families to follow suit using charters, taxpayer-funded voucher programs, tuition tax credits, and a wide range of other options. On the campaign trail, though, she presents herself as a champion of public schools and counsels parents not to leave failing institutions. She addressed a gathering of members of the nation's largest teachers union, declaring: "If you think your public school is not working, then go help your public school…Go help get more resources for [your public school]. Volunteer at your public school. Help get the teachers and school bus drivers and cafeteria workers and the custodial staff and the support staff, help get them some support so they can do the work that needs to be done. You don't like the building? You think it's old and decaying? Then get out there and push to get a new one." In an interview with Reason's Nick Gillespie, DeAngelis discusses school choice hypocrisy on the part of Warren, South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, former Obama Chief of Staff and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, and others. Many critics of charters and vouchers oppose the use of tax dollars at private or religious educational institutions, he notes, but have no issue when public funds are used in the same way via Pell grants, veterans benefits, or in plans for universal preschool. "Why is it any different between pre-K and college?" asks DeAngelis. "It seems pretty inconsistent to me." Reason is celebrating National School Choice Week. This story is part of a series that will be published over the course of the week highlighting different K-12 education options available to children and families.
GENESIS V. DARWIN: Shapiro sets the record straight about the creation of man
ALL CONFLICT IS THEOLOGICAL: Knowles proves that faith is what informs
Dinesh D'Souza CALLS OUT illegal aliens for cutting the line he had to wait in
From YAF Playlist- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkKiZHkQ2Vk&list=PLGC1Vd9mQlVNqyoYKScry44JJg6X4zEXq
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