Congressman Ron Paul is a supporter of it. Arizona shooter Jared Lee Loughner had a sick obsession with it. What would happen if the United States switched back to the gold standard?
Could the Senate start getting things done, if only legislators didn’t have to face filibuster threats? This week on The Breakdown: the history of the filibuster, and how to get rid of it.
In the media frenzy over Obama’s recent tax deal, few have mentioned the host of tax extenders and sweeteners that will end up costing the country billions of dollars.
Will the tax deal result in Keynes-style stimulus? Washington Editor Christopher Hayes and Tyler Cowen, an economics professor at George Mason University, break down Keynesianism and what it says about Obama’s tax cuts deal.
The Washington Post‘s Ezra Klein joins Chris Hayes to discuss whether a new bipartisan proposal in the Senate could pave the way for states to adopt single-payer healthcare systems.
Women still earn 77 cents on a man’s dollar for full-time work. The Paycheck Fairness Act would have helped remedy that unequal pay. On this week’s The Breakdown, the Center for American Progress’s Heather Boushey joins Christopher Hayes to talk about why Republican senators blocked the bill.
With no help likely to come from Congress, Dorian Warren and Chris Hayes ask: what can Obama, his National Labor Relations Board appointees and Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis can do to promote labor organizing?
The Center for Economic and Policy Research’s Dean Baker joins Christopher Hayes to answer the question: if Tea Party freshmen vote to not raise our debt ceiling as they vowed to do on the campaign trail, will government grind to a halt and bring the US economy down with it?