Join us Sunday on Melissa Harris-Perry with guest host Dorian Warren. We’ll have the very latest on Saturday’s shooting of two New York City police officers.
Then, 2015 is fast approaching with the U.S. and Russian economies moving in opposite directions heading into the new year. The Russian Ruble is in free-fall against the dollar, having lost half of its value since July. The decline is due in large part to the country’s reliance on oil exports, where prices have hit a five-year low this week. Meanwhile, stateside, the White House is working hard to remind Americans that the economy is steadily on the upswing. More jobs have already been created in 2014 than during any year since the 1990s, and in October the unemployment rate fell below 6% for the first time since 2008. How do these very different economic stories fit into the Obama-Putin dynamic?
And what about the woman whose words may mean a whole lot more to global markets than either President Obama or Vladimir Putin? Though it didn’t receive much buzz, we’re talking about how Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s comments on Wednesday hold the potential to move mountains of money. Joining our panel Sunday morning to discuss this and more are:
- Lisa Cook– Associate Professor of Economics and International Relations, Michigan State University
- Dan Dicker– President of wealth management firm MercBloc
- Peter Goodman– Editor-in-Chief, The International Business Times
- Aisha Moodie-Mills– Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress
Then we turn to Pakistan, where earlier this week in Peshawar, a horrific terror attack left 148 dead, mostly children. We will talk to Hillary Mann Leverett, author of “Going to Tehran,” and professor at the American University School of International Service for analysis.








