Free-Range Parenting Takes Effect

Free-Range Parenting Takes Effect

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Radio Archive, Episode 914 , Segment 5

Episode: USMCA vs. NAFTA, Ivory Smugglers, Personal Branding, Suicide Prevention

  • Oct 4, 2018 2:55 pm
  • 11:20 mins

(Originally aired April 3, 2018) Guest: Senator Lincoln Fillmore, (R), Utah’s 10th District Utah’s first in the nation free range parenting law took effect this week, and a number of states including New York and Texas are looking at following suit.  The bill shields parents from liability if they allow children to walk home from school, or to a park, or wait in the car by themselves. Last April we had the bill’s author, Utah State Senator Lincoln Fillmore on the line. He spoke with Top of Mind’s Tennery Taylor.

Other Segments

USMCA vs. NAFTA: A Look at the New North American Trade Deal

17 MINS

Guest: Earl Fry, PhD, Emeritus Professor, Political Science, BYU The US, Mexico and Canada trade a trillion dollars-worth of goods back and forth over their borders every year. And since 1993, that trade has been governed by an agreement called NAFTA – the North American Free Trade Act. This week, President Trump a new three-way deal to replace it: “Throughout the campaign, I promised to renegotiate NAFTA, and today we have kept that promise.  But, for 25 years, as a civilian, as a businessman, I used to say, “How could anybody have signed a deal like NAFTA?”  And I watched New England, and so many other places where I was just — the factories were leaving, the jobs were leaving, people were being fired, and we can’t have that. So we have negotiated this new agreement based on the principle of fairness and reciprocity.”

Guest: Earl Fry, PhD, Emeritus Professor, Political Science, BYU The US, Mexico and Canada trade a trillion dollars-worth of goods back and forth over their borders every year. And since 1993, that trade has been governed by an agreement called NAFTA – the North American Free Trade Act. This week, President Trump a new three-way deal to replace it: “Throughout the campaign, I promised to renegotiate NAFTA, and today we have kept that promise.  But, for 25 years, as a civilian, as a businessman, I used to say, “How could anybody have signed a deal like NAFTA?”  And I watched New England, and so many other places where I was just — the factories were leaving, the jobs were leaving, people were being fired, and we can’t have that. So we have negotiated this new agreement based on the principle of fairness and reciprocity.”