mr. vice-president, great to see you again. thanks for coming to wyoming, sean. sean: this is going to be a great day. typical wyoming day in the summertime. sean: it s a little different in new york. hey, since i have seen you last, have you had this heart transplant, you have been through a lot. how hard has that been? well, hard. i am here. it s. it s really a miracle. it s a tremendous gift that somebody gave, obviously, in terms of their willingness to donate, the family s willingness to donate a heart. and when you have the advantage of going frommen-stage heart failure, to where you are really about to hang it up because your heart s not working to service all of your vital organs, to all of a sudden, you have a new heart and the expectation that you may live another 15 or 20 years, it s a miracle. it s a tremendous gift. yeah, there is some rocky momes along the way. but you always have to think about what the alternative was. it is a lot better than the a
you again. thanks for coming to wyoming, sean. sean: this is going to be a great day. typical wyoming day in the summertime. sean: it s a little different in new york. hey, since i have seen you last, have you had this heart transplant, you have been through a lot. how hard has that been? well, hard. i am here. it s. it s really a miracle. it s a tremendous gift that somebody gave, obviously, in terms of their willingness to donate, the family s willingness to donate a heart. and when you have the advantage of going frommen-stage heart failure, to where you are really about to hang it up because your heart s not working to service all of your vital organs, to all of a sudden, you have a new heart and the expectation that you may live another 15 or 20 years, it s a miracle. it s a tremendous gift. yeah, there is some rocky momes along the way. but you always have to think about what the alternative was. it is a lot better than the alternative. sean: last time i s
you again. thanks for coming to wyoming, sean. sean: this is going to be a great day. typical wyoming day in the summertime. sean: it s a little different in new york. hey, since i have seen you last, have you had this heart transplant, you have been through a lot. how hard has that been? well, hard. i am here. it s. it s really a miracle. it s a tremendous gift that somebody gave, obviously, in terms of their willingness to donate, the family s willingness to donate a heart. and when you have the advantage of going frommen-stage heart failure, to where you are really about to hang it up because your heart s not working to service all of your vital organs, to all of a sudden, you have a new heart and the expectation that you may live another 15 or 20 years, it s a miracle. it s a tremendous gift. yeah, there is some rocky momes along the way. but you always have to think about what the alternative was. it is a lot better than the alternative. sean: last time i s
russia and china and iran pay a price. unfortunately neither the obama administration nor our friends in europe have really done what it takes. i think you have to say to the russians our relations are going to be different unless you change your behavior. we re going back to constructing a robust national missile defense system, we re going to get out new start arms agreement. we re prepared to do a lot of things and forget the reset button in our relations which obviously hasn t changed a thing. gregg: what about military force? should the kind of military support that forced moammar khadafy from power in libya should be considered in syria. should nato or turkey intervene or should america get involved? i don t think we re ready for that. among other reasons we re not going to get anything like the kind of international approval that we had in the context of libya. that doesn t bother me so much.
bain but stopped short of repeating the felony remark. romney says we expect more from the president than these kinds of attacks. gregg: more on the political fallout from the heated rhetoric. urging the president to, quote, rein in his staff. so which campaign is winning the war of words? erin is reporter for real clear politics. until yesterday romney was fairly stoic in enduring these attack ads but his tenure at bain capital. if you are responding you are losing. when stephanie cutter, a senior aide said me may have committed a felony invited yesterday s blitz demanding the apology? sure. in many ways that comment by stephanie was a gift to the romney campaign virtually no one thinks that mitt romney is a felon or did anything particularly wrong. it was a bit an oversight or difficult for him to relinquish his role. gregg: the obama campaign ads may be false and dishonest which most fact checkers found. let s put one of them up on the screen. smears often work and h