countries still fighting a war today. here in this country, we have a dwindling demographic of people who do remember the sacrifices that americans made in world war ii. what s your view of everything coming together to make this defining moment last? you know, it s interesting. someone said to me the other day that this conflict puts the expression micro aggression into some sort of context. proper context, yeah. or passive-aggressive. this is just aggression. it is a reminder that there s two fundamentally different systems at work on this planet. there s an authoritarian system, authoritarian mindset. it didn t go away. we didn t reach the end of history, as discussed in the 1990s. we haven t lost ourselves. i mean, the interesting thing about zelenskyy to me is he is reminding us of who we are. yes. in a kind of very, very
neighborhood for new building that pushed out the old buildings. they built these $300,000 for $400,000 homes now. nothing behind your back. i m greg from hazard street. it s about the anzon. what about them? about how they polluted this neighborhood. it s still polluted. it didn t go away. i know. lead doesn t go away. let them know what s going on right up until present day with that damn mayor downtown. let them know. zinc oxide, arsenic, mexicans going in there removing asbestos without anything to protect them. that s why they want them here, cheap labor and do what they want. would you like to talk to us on camera, ma am? hell no. then i ll finish talking to him. thank you very much. she s right. all that is true. it was a great victory for gregory and his neighborhood. but while it was the end of one environmental injustice, it was only the beginning of another. and once the development boom hit the river wards area of philly, decades of long buried
i m not convinced it s a winning issue for her to be talking about this plrominently. i wonder about whether she has the choice or not. she does but the president will continue to talk about it if he hadn t address it. president obama tried to ignore it, it didn t go away. she had no choice. should elizabeth warren have to respond to this repeated use of pocahon pocahontas which is a racial slur in a perfect world. but in a political world yes. we saw when barack obama released his birth der scertifi. she had to do this. saying hey, this is where you write that check for a million dollars. now she can move on and she will raise the people who are
people are booing the names of john mccain and george w. bush when they re mentioned at republican club meetings. uh-huh. it s as if amnesia has to me, it s part and parcel with what elected trump. people decided i don t like what is. i don t like the way we ve been going. yes. i don t like both parties. i don t like their mess and dysfunction and their separation from our concerns. they don t care about us in the least. so, they re in an ornery mood, still. that s the painful truth. it didn t go away after the 2016 election. it s still here. isn t the outrage you hear on this set and what you heard from steve bannon precisely what he s after? sure. doesn t he know what he s doing in he mentioned our show during the event last night. he figures this worked for donald trump, hypocrisy be
people are cheering. it didn t go away permanently. you re right, people have booked this cruise with this in mind, but also bonnie tyler was a big draw as well. i m told that the final cabin to book it was $15,000. so there was either a big solar eclipse fan or a big eclipse of the heart fan. how long will they be out at sea? this is a seven-day cruise. the thing about it is this wasn t initially planned to happen. this was a normal cruise. but once they found out this eclipse was happening, the captain, royal caribbean, they had a meteorologist, they all got together to find out that perfect spot, where the totality was going to hit, but was cloud coverage. they wanted to avoid as many