Anonymous ID: 2d9c95 Aug. 20, 2022, 3:07 p.m. No.17420466   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>17420328

>>17420420

Larry Kudlow

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Larry Kudlow

Larry Kudlow (25484250682) (cropped).jpg

12th Director of the National Economic Council

In office

April 2, 2018 – January 20, 2021

President Donald Trump

Preceded by Gary Cohn

Succeeded by Brian Deese

Personal details

Born Lawrence Alan Kudlow

 

August 20, 1947 (age 74)

Englewood, New Jersey, U.S.

Political party Republican (1981–present)

Other political

affiliations Democratic (before 1981)

Spouse(s) Nancy Gerstein

​

​

(m. 1974; div. 1975)​

 

Susan Cullman Sicher

​

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(m. 1981)​

 

Judith Pond

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(m. 1986)​

Alma mater University of Rochester (BA)

Princeton University

Known for The Kudlow Report

Kudlow & Cramer

Website www.kudlow.com Edit this at Wikidata

 

Lawrence Alan Kudlow (born August 20, 1947) is an American conservative television personality and financial program host for the Fox network who served as the Director of the National Economic Council during the Trump Administration from 2018 to 2021. He assumed that role after his previous employment as a CNBC television financial news host.[1][2] He held a corporate title of "economist" in the 1980s, though he is not formally educated in economics.

 

Kudlow began his career as a junior financial analyst at the New York Federal Reserve. He soon left government to work on Wall Street at Paine Webber and Bear Stearns as a financial analyst. In 1981, after previously volunteering and working for left-wing politicians and causes, Kudlow joined the administration of Ronald Reagan as associate director for economics and planning in the Office of Management and Budget.[3]

 

After leaving the Reagan Administration during the second term, Kudlow returned to Wall Street and Bear Stearns, serving as the firm's chief economist from 1987 until 1994. During this time, he also advised the gubernatorial campaign of Christine Todd Whitman on economic issues. In the late 1990s, after a publicized battle with cocaine and alcohol addiction, Kudlow left Wall Street to become an economic media commentator – first with National Review, and later hosting several shows on CNBC.

 

>>17420254

 

>Gab news.gab.com

 

[August 19, 2022]

 

Gab Received A Letter From Congress Today

 

Today Gab received the letter below from Congress. We weren’t going to publicize it, but given that the Committee went to the press before we did there’s no point pretending that we didn’t get it.

 

We are considering our response to the House Oversight Committee.

 

For the rest of you, know that we cooperate with law enforcement regularly on public safety matters and we never comment on non-public communications with law enforcement, even when it would be convenient to do so for public relations purposes, such as today or in any response to Congress we may choose to send at a later date.

 

We will add one thing for the public and the media to chew on in the meantime, given that the relevant case is now public. The House’s letter makes reference to a Gab user who posted threats against law enforcement on our platform. The implication of the letter is that we are somehow complicit in those threats. The posts in question were made on or about August 11th and an arrest was made on August 15th.

 

In that case, as the now-public affidavit supporting the arrest warrant states, we received an emergency data request for the subject through our law enforcement disclosure portal at 6:10 PM on August 11th. We responded at 6:10 (i.e., within one minute) to inform the FBI the issue was being actioned. Responsive records were provided to the FBI by 8:20 PM, or 130 minutes later.

 

We know for a fact that this is orders of magnitude faster responding to law enforcement than companies like Twitter and Facebook, on whose platforms far more threats against law enforcement – and far more hate, pornography, and other unpleasantness – can be found. Just yesterday for example a man was arrested and found with “buckets of human organs and skin” which he purchased on Facebook.

 

We don’t scream about how seriously we take public safety. We don’t publicize it. We don’t use it to make political statements. We just do the work, try to be as responsible a corporate citizen as we can, and provide all lawful assistance to law enforcement as efficiently as we can given that Gab is a small business with limited resources. We like to think we do a good job at this.

 

We would recommend that the members of the Committee call up their friends over at the DOJ to verify our bona fides. In the meantime, as we consider our formal response, for all the commentators out there who have been calling for Gab to be shut down for years on end, just because you don’t know about the public safety work we do doesn’t mean it isn’t happening.

 

https://news.gab.com/2022/08/19/gab-receives-a-letter-from-congress-2/