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  • I got you a present.

  • I made-- I designed you a shoe.

  • Whoa!

  • I'll give you that later.

  • You don't have to carry it around.

  • From a good Massachusetts company.

  • Oh, is that right?

  • Someone's from Massachusetts.

  • What brings you to Los Angeles?

  • What are you up to?

  • Well, I have grandkids out here.

  • Oh, nice. Oh, that's-- how old are your--

  • - I came out-- - --grandkids?

  • --to see family. Youngest one's seven.

  • The oldest is 16.

  • Enough to have fun.

  • Enough to have-- do you take the kids to Disneyland?

  • Are you a fun grandma?

  • You bet.

  • Yes.

  • The last time I was out here we did Disneyland.

  • It was a make up for someone's birthday.

  • And we had a ball. - You did?

  • It was fun. Yeah.

  • - Did you wear the mouse ears? - Yes.

  • You did?

  • Because that's dangerous, to put on a hat

  • when you're a politician, right?

  • They can make fun of you afterwards.

  • Life is too short.

  • No, you've got to get out there and do what you want to do.

  • All right.

  • That's good.

  • Because most of the time when we see, you're grilling somebody

  • or you're letting somebody have it.

  • Lightly fried.

  • Are you from an argumentative family?

  • Are you guys like fighters, a rough and tumble type

  • of people?

  • You know that's actually a good question.

  • I would describe it not fighters in that usual sense.

  • I'm the baby I have three much older brothers.

  • And boy I tell you, you grow up in a household

  • with three older brothers, I mean, it's kind of root, hog,

  • or die.

  • They're in there.

  • But it is the case that I watched the women in my family

  • really fight for how they saved our family.

  • I grew up in a paycheck to paycheck family, all three

  • of my older brothers going off to the military.

  • Family starting to get a little bit ahead,

  • and then my daddy has a heart attack.

  • And he's out of work for a long period of time.

  • They repossess the-- we lose the family station wagon.

  • My mom was 50 years old.

  • She never worked outside the home.

  • And I remember at nights she put me to bed

  • and she closed the door and she'd cry

  • about what was going to happen.

  • And finally one morning I walk into the bedroom

  • and she's got that best black dress laid out on the bed.

  • The one, you know, for weddings and funerals.

  • And she's crying and she's talking to herself.

  • She's saying, we will not lose this house,

  • we will not lose this house.

  • She pulls on that black dress and she blows her nose,

  • puts on her lipstick, puts on her high heels,

  • and walks to the Sears to get a minimum wage job.

  • And that minimum wage job saved our house

  • and it saved our family.

  • And I learned about women who fight to save their families.

  • Wow.

  • That's some story.

  • Now we barely even have Sears anymore.

  • I know, I know.

  • Yeah, it all changes.

  • And yet the part that doesn't change--

  • this is what really gets to me.

  • The part that doesn't change is that middle class families,

  • working families, people who work hard, play by the rules,

  • they work harder and harder and harder

  • and just take one punch after another.

  • It really is the case that, at least when I was growing up,

  • that minimum wage job my mother got was at a time

  • when a minimum wage job would keep a family of three afloat.

  • You could make a mortgage payment.

  • Today a minimum wage job won't keep a mama

  • and a baby out of poverty.

  • And you know why that is?

  • It's because Washington once upon a time

  • wrote the rules through the lens of,

  • what helps middle class families?

  • What helps poor families get opportunity and move up?

  • Today Washington writes its rules through the lens of,

  • what helps the donors?

  • And the donors don't want to see a higher minimum wage,

  • than Washington does not produce a higher minimum wage,

  • and that is fundamentally evil.

  • It definitely seems to be the case.

  • And you even have instances now with Mick Mulvaney where

  • they're actually admitting it.

  • They're openly saying it. - You saw this.

  • Mick Mulvaney shows up in front of thousands of bankers

  • and says, you know, back when I was a congressman,

  • when the lobbyists came in we had a rule in my office.

  • When the lobbyist came in, if they hadn't given me any money,

  • I didn't see him.

  • If they'd given me money, then maybe I'd talk to him.

  • You know that's called pay to play.

  • And that's what's gone wrong in Washington.

  • That is a Washington that's working for the lobbyists

  • and not working for the American people.

  • When there's something that Americans care about,

  • and we tell them, maybe I tell them

  • or other people say, call your congresspeople,

  • call your representatives, your senators,

  • does that have an impact?

  • Is that even worth doing?

  • Oh man, yes, and I'll tell you how we know that.

  • So think about it.

  • I went to watch Donald Trump be inaugurated.

  • I actually wanted to see it.

  • I was no further than here to the band.

  • And watch him-- and it's good, because it's now burned

  • on the back of my eyeballs.

  • I'm serious, listen.

  • If I ever get tired or a little discouraged, I think gee,

  • I ought to be working on other stuff.

  • I lean back, I see Donald Trump getting sworn in.

  • I'm back.

  • But I'm thinking about, after he gets sworn in, I'm thinking,

  • this is it.

  • The Republicans now have the House, they have the Senate,

  • they have the White House.

  • And they've already said umpteen zillion

  • times they're going to roll back the Affordable Care Act.

  • They're going to roll back health

  • care for millions of Americans.

  • And we don't have the votes to stop them.

  • We don't have a way to stop this.

  • And so you think about what happened.

  • The day after Donald Trump was inaugurated--

  • look, his inauguration, the historians

  • are going to write about it for a long time.

  • Because it was so big? There was so many people there?

  • That's right.

  • First fight he wants to pick, how many people

  • came to admire me?

  • His first fight was with math.

  • But not his last fight with math.

  • But the next day, what happens?

  • The biggest protest march in the history of the world occurs.

  • All those women, all those friends

  • of women, all those kids who got out and said,

  • my voice will be heard.

  • And they protested, they took to the streets,

  • and then everybody else starts coming out.

  • We start doing rallies around health care.

  • You start talking about health care.

  • People all across this country, people

  • come off the sidelines-- shoot, the scientists

  • came off the sidelines.

  • Right?

  • When the nerds come out, you know this is it.

  • They heard it was a women's march.

  • They're like hey, let us in.

  • You know, the best sign up--

  • you have to admit, they had great signs.

  • - Oh, the signs were fantastic. - Oh, the signs.

  • Yeah.

  • My favorite from the scientists

  • was the one, beer, brought to you by science.

  • But think about it.

  • People kept coming out.

  • That summer I was back and forth in the Senate.

  • I watched mamas show up with babies

  • with complex medical needs.

  • They'd have a baby in a stroller and be pulling a wagon that

  • had breathing equipment and feeding equipment,

  • and all kinds of special emergency stuff.

  • And they would get right in the faces

  • of these Republican senators who had

  • announced that they were going to vote

  • to roll back health care.

  • And remember, now it was not only the Affordable Care Act.

  • They were going to rollback parts of Medicaid.

  • And they would get right in their faces

  • and say, that's the face of Medicaid.

  • You roll back Medicaid and this baby does not get the therapist

  • she needs, does not get the equipment she needs,

  • does not get the operation she needs.

  • This baby's life is on the line and I

  • want you to think about her when you go in and vote.

  • And remember how it is by the end of that summer.

  • The House has already voted to repeal health care,

  • to rollback parts of Medicaid for millions

  • and millions of people.

  • When it comes over to the Senate and you

  • remember how that vote got?

  • 51, 49.

  • We saved health care for millions

  • and millions of Americans.

  • But here's the deal.

  • Oh, it's to celebrate-- but here's the deal.

  • We didn't have any more Democratic votes

  • than we'd had before.

  • What we had was a change in democracy.

  • What we had was a change in the people who said,

  • democracy is not just something that happens like every four

  • years or every two years.

  • Democracy is not just, yeah yeah,

  • I'll kind of pay attention to the one or two offices

  • and go and vote.

  • How many millions of people across this country,

  • whether they had health care or not for themselves, said,

  • democracy is up to me.

  • I got to be in this fight.

  • And they got in the fight, and that's the thing.

  • It's been another group that's come in off the sidelines.

  • The latest, the kids from Florida following the shooting

  • and all across this country.

  • 14-year-olds and 16-year-olds and 18-year-olds that said,

  • I'm in this fight.

  • That's democracy.

  • The new democracy.

  • And that's all thanks to Donald Trump for energizing us.

  • There we go.

  • Right?

  • I know everybody asks you if you're

  • going to run for president. And I know--

  • No.

  • --you're running for senator right now--

  • I am.

  • --and that's what you're focused on.

  • Yep.

  • But on the chance that you do one day run

  • for president of the United States,

  • have you ever paid off a porn star?

  • - No. - You have not?

  • - I'm quite sure. - That's an unequivocal no?

  • - Equivocal no. - All right.

  • And also I'm not running for president.

  • I'm running for Senate.

  • Massachusetts 2018.

  • Senator Elizabeth Warren.

  • If you liked that video then put a ring on it.

  • Click the Subscribe button below.

  • Oh, oh, oh.

I got you a present.

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參議員伊麗莎白-沃倫談醫保與最低工資標準 (Senator Elizabeth Warren on Health Care & Minimum Wage)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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