and make progress for the american people and for this country. and if you view it all in very personal terms, it doesn t go well. we ve seen that in the first six months. david, tell us about the latest episode of the axe files where you sat down with congressman john lewis. actually we have a clip. let s play it and then you can talk about it. i think one of the most momentous events in the civil rights movement was when abc cut into their screening of judging the nuremberg which is a film on war crimes to do a film on bloody sunday chronicling the attack on you and the people you were marching with. that, as much as anything, probably led to the expediting of the voting rights act. well, the american people saw
we ll have a product they can buy, a product that s going to be cheaper, a product they get to tailor for their needs. then let s talk tax reform. if this doesn t go well, are you getting to tax reform? we re absolutely getting to tax reform. will you if this doesn t pass? we re going to get to tax reform if this passes or doesn t. we are on a tax reform e agenda when we come back in september, when the august recess is over, we will be 100% engaged in tax reform. when i look at your proskrexs, it would be great if we had 3% gdp but that s a goal, not a libaseline. you come from goldman. you base your models on actuality, not a goal. is that lofty? is it risky? look at the kansas experiment. trickle-down economics failed there. we do not think that 3% gdp is that lofty of a goal. why? we re setting realistic expectations.
we treat these like they are movie scene moments, like there s a script for how someone is supposed to react. when the president or in any case i did daily intelligence briefings for a year for the attorney general a the fbi director bob mueller at the time there are times when it doesn t go well. there are times when the reaction is not what you expect. i was not surprised when director comey said in response to senator feinstein that he was stunned, and he even in self-reflection said perhaps it was a bit of a cowardly moment. slightly cowardly. you don t know what s going to happen. you don t know exactly how it s going to play out. to expect they should treat it like a movie script and how to play it like they would if they had more reflection time, puts a high burden on them in that moment. and ned price, the oval office itself is an intimating factor, is it not? it sure is, andrea. you know, you hear from mark kas
strong shot if an renegotiate doesn t go well, he ll pull the plug on the whole thing. we are back with more in just a moment. i think the crisis on the korean peninsula israel, is the worst i ve seen. i m not a student of the cuban missile crisis, but what i know of it is it seems that we are faced with a threat and a leader who is intent on achieving his goal and nuclear capability against the united states. jenna: admiral harris with a sobering warning that there is no doubt in his mind that north korea will pursue ways to strike the u.s. with nuclear weapons. he says it s a matter of when. the question is what we do about this?
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