superficial was in talking about libya. yeah. and what the united states and the western powers what responsibility they had on the the removal of the dictator there but then also leaving it to what it is today. well, i think it was a thin discussion there. and i was about to tweet. i didn t quite get it out because of the flow of things last night. but you could also argue that the intervention in libya, which may have saved tens of thousands of lives. it s hard to relive history. may have also triggered a change in the way rebel groups across the region and particularly in syria looked at their task. rather than trying to create a very holistic opposition to bashar al assad, i think a lot of the focus changed to how to trigger western and american involvement in syria after the benghazi attack. i don t think that s something that came up. when you saw hillary clinton essentially taking credit for the benghazi intervention and regime change there, it s very hard to explain t
do this interview. during the course we talked about her father s legacy. in 1978 there was something contentious. it was an initiative that would have stopped openly gay and lesbian teachers from teaching in public schools in california. much to everyone s surprise, ronald reagan opposed it and wrote an op-ed. he said being gaye is not contagious or going to affect your children. there s a big dichotomy with ronald reagan, myself, a lot of gay people were not happy with him. he was late to the party with the aids issue, costs tens of thousands of lives. but, as she said in the interview, it s not that simple. the conversation apparently she had with her dad came out of the fact rock hudson, she saw him with a woman, kissing a
following this story for us, she s in baghdad now. first of all, the confusion surrounding what s going on in syria two years into this war in syria, 70,000 dead, a couple million refugees, now reports of chemical weapons. it seems to get worse, arwa, every day. it is getting worse every day, wolf. i think what you have now unfolding in syria is the worst case scenario. full fledged civil war that claimed tens of thousands of lives, you have neighboring countries struggling to deal with the on-going influx of refuge refugees, you have a polarized society in syria, each side believing it is fighting for its very existence. you have civilian population that continues to bear the brunt of the violence taking place, and you also have the emergence, growing emergence of the extremist groups that are of great concern to everyone, also the united states, of course,
had weapons of mass destruction, that it was an entirely different situation. four americans died that didn t have to die. is there a blurring of the line here? especially when it comes to the president and senator mccain? a lot of people would like look at the condi rice situation and the tens of thousands of lives, a combination of military and civilian lives that have been lost based on faulty information. i think it s easy to make the assumption that there s more politics on the side. most people that know john mccain, and i consider him a friend, he would say he s a patriot. he wants to know the truth. this is about what he just said. it s about four people died in benghazi that didn t have to. i think senator mccain is doing his job along with senator graham to get to the bottom and the best the way they know how. and i fully support their actions and their words. but they re making this they re talking about watergate.
the polls in america showed the american people were against it. they were always a majority against it and it has grown over time. almost 40 democrats who voted for it got kicked out because of their votes. the american people still don t support it. can we have a law stand like that? can it be accepted by the american people under those circumstances two years later? i think it can. 86.5 million people were covered as result of this law. this law begins to push back against the unbridled attack on women s health. 20 million women were screened for things like breast cancer and bone density, perhaps saving tens of thousands of lives. it ended preexisting for everyone. including being pregnant,ing about the victim of domestic abuse it also ends the lifetime cap on healthcare coverage.