welcome, everybody. do you believe that? do you believe this hillary stuff? there s a couple of things i don t believe but we can start there. how does she serve as secretary of state for how many years and nobody notices her e-mails are not coming from government address? what is going on? i know. then they decide what they re doing to release? oh we ve released 55,000 e-mails. no, now all of her e-mails have to go public. she made the choice. this is staggering. you know this is what happens every time she starts to run, it brings up memories of eight years that people look back and have glossed over a lot of things. but every day in washington, d.c. when the clintons were there there was another example of how they just didn t play by the same rules as everybody else in washington, d.c. and then they lawyered themselves up. i don t think we re overstating it. this is kind of foreign country, they know no boundaries. this is shocking. i think it is. i
0 america s next top angry little man. wow. would seeing a shrink bring them back from the brink? yes, feeling low makes them blow. terrorists, it seems, are driven by low self-esteem. at least that s what some florida high school students are being taught. in florida. the florida virtual school, an online public school, offers a course called invisible warfare in which students learn how religious fundamentalism can lead people to become terrorists. according to the lesson plan, common traits that psychologists have found in terrorists are that they are often risk takers and many suffer from low self-esteem. sometimes joining a terrorist group provides these individuals with a sense of belonging. yeah, just like going out for football. and if only daddy loved them more they wouldn t go out and bomb people. maybe some huggery could stop their thuggery. then again, not everyone responds well to affection. see? that s a terrorist just waiting to happen. nick. the lesson i m getting fro