cheering american boys to the front from the safety of the op-ed pages. making the same claims that took us into baghdad, blew apart that country. have they no shame? i don t think so. the big show was in washington for a tea party rally opposing the nuclear deal with iran. ted cruz told the crowd the deal is catastrophic and the single greatest national security threat facing america. if this deal goes through, we know to an absolute certainty, people will die. americans will die, israelis will die, europeans will die. we re now talking about giving the ayatollah khomeini, a homicidal maniac, who hates america every bit as much as bin laden did, giving him, $100 billion, to carry out his murderous plans. the last time senator cruz was certain of anything, was when he supported the iraq war that cost the lives of 200,000,
nfl culture, right? the article saying today, coaches say a given person might be a horrible human being but he s our horrible human being, sfr certain players in certain positions is cherished. they are going into a street fight, we want to make sure we have at homicidal maniac on other side. what does that do in the locker room? we can all agree this is abuse. i don t think anyone should take that differently than being abuse. i hope he s held accountable. his career is over. i hope that it is. but it s this vicious cycle we see with quote/unquote hazing or abuse, this is what we went through. and what it does, it causes young are guys to become very bitter and turns them from the victim then the aggressor and they then do it to the next guys coming up. it s a cycle that doesn t end and it s horrible. krystal, that s something the country looks to and takes cues
homicidal maniac. tucker: we internallize, maybe he had a good point. no, he didn t it. the looters in the 90s didn t have a good point. you can t ignore there is corruption and racism in some organizations, but you talk about it. there s no excuse for killing another person. this thing has been festering in this guy since he joined the force in 2005, got fired in 2008 and now acting about it. tucker: that s the other thing later we re assuming, there s a causal relationship between the experience at the lapd and now. but normal noncrazy people don t shoot strangers. because of what he said in the manifesto. alisyn: there s a cause and effect, and obviously with homicidal maniac. anybody who has felt wronged by the lapd is somehow going online and showing support. tucker: i ve got to say, i would love to air their names
mistaken identity and how tightly wound the police officers are right now. because we have video of a police officer kind of checking out a truck that fits the description of the one that christopher dorner was in, and a dark nissan and torrence 50 miles away from the scene this morning, two other shootings by police officers against people they were not at all involved with. trace, stand by, obviously, this will be unfolding throughout the program and dr. ablow will join us getting inside the mind of the homicidal maniac. we ll be right back in two minutes. glucerna hunger smart. they have carb steady, with carbs that digest slowly to help minimize blood sugar spikes. [ male announcer ] glucerna hunger smart. a smart way to help manage hunger and diabetes. five days later, i had a massive heart attack. bayer aspirin was the first thing the emts gave me. now, i m on a bayer aspirin regimen. [ male announcer ] be sure to talk to your doctor
boundaries and how special he might be. so, they were newcomers to psycho pathology that was developing in him for quite a long while. he d like to believe the first people to disempower him and treat him the wrong way were the folks who lost his case or brought that case to take his job away, but that s not true. it started long before that. these are fall-guys that he s taken out. he doesn t want to look at his life. alisyn: in fact, dr. ablow, in his manifesto, he does touch on that, he felt victimized even as far back as elementary school, says he was the recipient of racial slurs and fement that again at the l.a.p.d. it s hard to know what to put stock in, in an accused homicidal maniac s manifesto, but clearly he says he feels like a victim. where do you begin with someone like that. i begin by saying, telling me all the ways you re a victim and probably you don t know some of the ways, but let s stop this insanity with