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Transcripts For MSNBCW MSNBC Live With Tamron Hall 20161026 15:00:00


tamron hall in the house. craig, thank you so much for not dancing. j.t. is a national treasure. thank you for not dance. are you ready? a new round of new polls, including a new national poll out and one from the battleground state of florida. this is a bloomberg poll. a lot of people talking about it this morning. kellyanne conway forced to defend donald trump s schedule this morning which includes promoting his new hotel before hitting the campaign trail. claiming hillary s plans in syria could spark world war iii. also ahead, hillary clinton finally connecting with millennials. a new survey is out this morning. clinton is speaking this hour in florida. we will bring her comments to you live. plus, arizona sheriff joe arpaio is also a donald trump supporter. he s now been charged with criminal contempt in a case
involving racial profiling. what this means for the man with the nickname america s toughest sheriff. good morning, everyone, i m tamron hall. coming to you live from the msnbc headquarters in new york. here s the state of the presidential race. right now, hillary clinton is about to hold a rally in lake worth, florida. donald trump combines business and politics. trump choosing to attend the grand opening his new hotel in washington, d.c. right now that is happening before he heads to north carolina later this afternoon. a new bloomberg poll i mentioned to you is out this morning. it shows donald trump with a slim two-point lead in florida, a state he even admits he much win. a new monmouth university polls shows trump pulling ahead of secretary clinton in arizona by a single point. both polls within the margin of error. we also had headlines from the trump campaign. trump opening up a new line attack against hillary clinton. telling reuters, quote, you ll
end up with world war iii over syria. his campaign pushing back against a washington post report that trump has all but stopped raising money for the republican party. and as trump heads to the battleground state north carolina today, his running mate hits three key states, nevada, colorado, utah. nbc s hallie jackson. when the whole birther statement was supposed to happen, he convinced the media to show up at his hotel and had this event billed as his acknowledgement president obama was born in the united states. that was a one-line sentence at the very end. this is why the question has come up about is this another stunt and why is he using the 13 day mark here to tout his hotel. is it more important to be business donald trump or try to be the president of this country. he s tripping to have it both ways.
i m glad you brought up the last time. it was for that news conference. the acknowledgement of the fact that president was born in the united states. if you remember, that was something touted as sort of this newsy moment and ended up being an infomercial until trump at the very end quote to the point. basically i think a 45-word sentence. seven words of which wallace the actual news of the day if you will. this is being billed differently. this is being touted by the trump campaign as a ribbon cutting. they re not calling it a campaign event. we are here covering it because it is the republican nominee for president choosing to attend the so-called grand opening of his hotel in washington. it is a significant story in that it is just 13 days until the election. there are some fresh questions from critics about whether this is the best use of donald trump s time. that said, hereby is the argument the campaign is making.
donald trump stops off to unveil an incredible hotel and everybody s hair s on fire. so that was their response. let s get to more of the news here with donald trump saying world war iii could be the next thing this country sees if hillary clinton s syria plan goes into place. we still don t know what donald trump s plan is to deal with isis in syria. the event was set to start at the top of the hour so we re now five minutes past. you talked about the attacks on hillary clinton. in a new interview out with reuters, he took aim with her syria party, arguing she could potentially start world war iii. there have been questions raised even from his own running mate. you also look at his other attack line he s been pushing this week on obamacare. hitting, trying to tie hillary
clinton ton these rate hikes some consumers will see. that is a message we expect him to continue to push through the rest of the campaign. all right, thank you very much. now to the headlines from the clinton campaign, she continues to face fallout from e-mails being released by wikileaks alley from the account of her campaign chairman. this will be the 19th releelgs of e-mails. they ve been coming as you know in batches. a big endorsement. she tweeted overnight she s proud to now have the endorsement of secretary of state colin powell who served under both bushes and president reagan. a survey by harvard shows hillary has expanded her lead over trump with young voters. the number now at 28 points. kacie hunt joins us from florida where secretary clinton is holding an event as she also celebrates her 69th birthday. this new batch of e-mails puts
i do think it s something they re worried will last into a potential clinton administration. whether it s because they re sewing division within their own party because of the things they said about progressives in the primary or whether it s republicans who might be looking to follow up on this once we get clear p clear of this election season. let s talk about secretary powell. we ve seen allegedly e-mails from him. he did not dispute whether they were inaccurate descriptions of hillary clinton. some not so kind words that were leaked out from his e-mails. and now he s endorsing he coming around to seeing her as the better candidate here. that s right. there was clearly some frustration on colin part s part about the fact he felt as though hillary clinton was blaming him for using private e-mail because he of course was one of predecessors and had his own arrangement years before the e-mail system evolved to where secretary clinton was using it
so he s been a little defensive, but he s clearly put that aside telling a lunchen in long island pretty firmly he is on hillary clinton s side, having a lot negative things to say about donald trump. hillary clinton made an appearance on univision s talk show. showing, again, a lighter side. some of that confidence you ve been reporting a lot as far as the tone of the campaign at least at this point. this is her on the very popular show on univision. doing a little salsa dancing which i think you can see there. yeah, no, this is part of their outreach to hispanic voters. acontrols t across the country. in florida, an all important state quite frankly for donald trump. hillary clinton would still win if she doesn t win florida. donald trump not so much, tamron. another example something he would not be able to do considering the huge gap in support appearing on a univision show, not an option. thank you very much, kacie.
good intrigue but i really don t think it s going to move the needle 13 days out from the election. does it, joan, though, amp up some of the tmp support? he saw an opening with this and talked about it on the campaign trail in florida. let me play what donald trump said about these latest hacked e-mails. obama, he had to know that hillary was using an illegal server, but he claimed otherwise. so that means obama is now into the act. and now i understand that despite his hatred of the clintons, because i know one thing, bill hates him, but despite his hatred, now i understand why he pushed her. because he didn t want ton get caught up in the big lie. he s caught up now, folks. again, this is in florida. he s got a slight lead according to bloomberg. how do you process? does this have a staying power? none of those words fit together or made any sense to
me, tamron. not to you but to those people there. i can t speak for those people. the white woman carrying the blacks for trump sign. it s all very confusing. what i will say about what president did or didn t know. tam ron, if you send me an e-mail, i don t know where your server is. i don t know what kind of system you have. she did not send him an e-mail from hillary clinton at. this is my private illegal server. he had no way. that was not proof he had gotten some e-mail, he knew about her server. it s nothing about what he knew about the server. when we look at the electorate, we often hear the statement, it doesn t matter who would run, you d see pretty much a split in this country. the still surprising i think given the awful three weeks donald trump has had. his lack of focus. seemingly on, now, tv, and now this hotel, that it s still a tight race. want to play what a voter in
wyoming told our own jacob soberoff. a part of wyoming county yy in pennsylvania. this is a little glimpse. let s play it. is that your trump sign in front? i have a better one at home. why are there so many trump signs? what is it about that guy? i think he says it as it is. i mean, look at his business. he s a good business man. you going to vote on november 8th? probably not. he s not going to vote. donald trump is a good business man. this man, while rural white male, doesn t fit the stereotype of the older white voter who wants america to be, quote/unquote, great again. but he s not going to show up. is this a result of donald trump s rhetoric in telling his supporters that he s already been defeated in some ways? i think it s very well, actually, it s not very shocking that donald trump is going around saying the election is rigged.
that does have the effect of suppressing voter turnout. also, i think you will see the importance of a ground game is going to come into play. if you haven t had folks out there making multiple contacts with voters and if the people who are supporting you are people who haven t voted in the past, these are folks who need to be, you know, told when to vote, how to vote, where to vote, over and over between. it just doesn t seem like republicans have that ground game prised he said he s not going to vote. first, marie claire has an article that features evangelical voters in iowa who won t admit they want to vote for hillary clinton. there s a headline, the trump supporters who are secretly voting for hillary. one woman says, i don t have the emotional energy to go there especially with other christians. for a long time, the republican party has been viewed as the only acceptable choice. it s just not worth the capital
for me to support clinton in a visible context but secretly these women will go in to vote for hillary clinton. i think that s fascinating. fascinating. i think it is possible we re going to see secret clinton voters whether p rather than these secret trump voters. what i meant by the best for last, megyn kelly/newt gingrich, here it is. if trump is a sexual predator he s not a sexual predator i m not taking a position on it. you cannot defend that statement. people like you using language that s inflammatory that s not true. you want to go back to the tapes your show recently, you are fascinated with sex and you don t care about public policy. me, really? do you want to comment on whether the clinton ticket has a relationship to a sexual predator? we on the kelly file has covered that story as well. i want to hear your words. bill clinton, sexual predator.
i dare you. say bill clinton, sexual predator. evangelical women, all of them, clutching pearls. what happened? i mean, newt gingrich had a complete meltdown. i don t know if it s because he doesn t like it when a one stands up to him and speaks her mind. it was very disturbing to watch. again, we ve seen this pattern oe over and over again of republican men sort of bullying these women and yelling over them and talking over them. and, you know, really the irony of newt gingrich bringing up this topic. really. is that why go back to that marie claire article that some of these evangelical women who say i don t have the patience to argue with it at church but i know what i m going to do. when you have newt gingrich, rudy giuliani, chris christie, as the three men telling them what to do. they re taking this attitude toward women like megyn kelly who are incredibly intelligent, incredibly accomplished. once relatable to conservative women and is herself, you know, on
a conservative station but is still treated like she knows nothing and like she s fascinated by sex. can you think of anything more creepy than to have to talk to newt about sex, i mean, please. nope. please, she s doing her job, and yet she s stigma titzed, she s the one with the sex problem. daniela, thank you, joan walsh as well, thank you. coming up, trump s controversies could cost him a victory in the solid red state of utah, home state to majority of mormons. we ve been talking a lot about utah because it is a reliably red state. up next, we ll talk with a mormon family who says they can t decide between hillary clinton and evan mcmullin who s been rising in the polls. what does that do to trump? plus, live to the battleground state of florida. early voting already smashing numbers from 2012 but exactly who is turning out? we have some new insight for you to digest. that s next. an opening nightn broadway is kind omac. i m beowulf boritt and m a broadw set digner.
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hillary clinton will be having an event later this afternoon. people coming to polling stations like this one ton my right if you can catch it here behind this car. there are more than 300 polling stations like this one across the state. we ll been seeing people trickle in all morning especially latinos because latinos know the fastest growing segment of a population here. you would think that s good news for hillary clinton. there s more to it than that. as you said in that new bloomberg poll today, trump showing a slight edge with hispanics in miami where there s a higher concentration of cuban-american voters. trump really hardening his stance. even meeting with bay of pigs veterans. the deciding factor for a cuban-american voter who we spoke with earlier today. let s hear him. it was very good that he did have that because that was part of the whole history. it was very good for him. actually going to get a lot of cuban votes because of that.
trump really targeting that cuban vote because immigration is not a big issue for that community. and every single vote is going to count for him here in florida. it may all boil down to this date and this county where i am now. it s incredible, thank you develop. greatly appreciate that report. turning now to the unexpected story playing out in utah. donald trump may be the first republican to lose that state since 1964. the polls there extremely tight. between trump and clinton. and the third party candidate, evan mcmullin. utah s mormon voters are also divided closely on who they will vote phone p for november 8th. they are of course the key voting democratic for utah. vice presidential candidate tim kaine targeted mormon voters with his op-ed yesterday on the importance of religious mission service. of course he was a missionary. part of our up for grabs series. now, in salt lake city where he
spoke with some of the voters in the state. it s back to a refrain we heard during the primary election. anybody but donald trump. who would have thought we d be back here in utah ahead of the general election but as you said for the first time since the 1960s, a republican could lose the race for the white house. it comes down to these mormon voters. i spent some time with a young mormon republican family who never voted for anybody but the republican candidate and this is what they told me. republicans, both of you? traditionally, yes, always voted republican. did you guys caucus in the republican good catch, in the republican primary? yes, you ve been a delegate. twice. so here we are pretty close to election day. wow, what are you guys going to do? we battle back and forth. for a little while, i looked at hillary clinton. right now i m really excited about the momentum in the mcmullin campaign.
it s caused me to explore my own political beliefs. i think traditionally at least i ve kind of toed the party line becau that s everybody around here has traditionally been a republican. will this be the first time you haven t voted republican for president ever? correct. yeah, yes. for you both? yes. so does it i mean, what s the primary motivating factor in not voting for donald trump? is it your faith, your religion? it s like a core belief of, like, look at these two guys riding around. yeah. we hold the presidency in a really high regard. it s important to us to know who that person is and what they stand for. for months now, it s been very, very clear. long before any newly released published foot only of horrific things. it s been pretty obvious to us that he s not that representative we want. right now, you re in you re going to vote for who if it was today? if it was today, mcmullin.
today? probably mcmullin. and if you re faced with the choice of going for mcmullin, donald trump as the winner in utah, hillary clinton? sure. i really even though i don t want my vote to be driven as an anti-this is one case where i feel like it s important. tam ron, in a sign of how close things are here, republican vice presidential candidate mike pence will be in utah today. that is something that you normally wouldn t see at this stage of the presidential campaign. but the six electoral votes in utah could make the difference in the race to 270. wow, all right, jacob, it is always great to just hear some insight and understanding, with these 13 days out, especially in utah, where you have a third party candidate that may result in votes. coming up, is donald trump s campaign damaging his brand and his business?
there s a piece p petition to g name removed from a residential building here in new york. what about people staying in his hotels? and did singer and actor justen timberlake brake the law with this selfie? we ll have the answer after the break and a lesson for anyone else who plans to take a selfie at the polling place. so what s your news? i g! i ll be progmming at ge. oh got job too, at zazzies. (frien gasp) the p whe you pufruit on imals? i love that! guysi ll be writing code that helpsachines communicate. (ierptg) i ju zazzied you. hone vibrates) (friends giggle) i can dogs, hamste, guinea pigs. you me it. i m going to traform the way the wod work (proudly) i prrammed that hat. and i n do casaba melons. i ll be helping turbines por citi. i put a turbine on a cat. (frie) cake hospitalsun meficitly. is i t aompetion! i benarnold, the infamous titor d i know a thing or t about trading. platfo that has all the.on e get off the comper traitor!
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trump hotels in new york, vegas and chicago were also down by more than 58% during the first half of this year. and just blocks from trump s own manhattan apartment, more than 400 residents of trump place are petitioning to, quote, dumb the trump name. it s all the negative connotations that bring things up from misogynist to racist to homo phobe, tax evader. joining me now, scott galloway, professor of marketing at nyu stern school of business. thank you for your time. thank you for having me. looking at the trump statement from the business versus the numbers that are coming in, which is a clearer picture of what s happening? i m going to go out on a limb here and say mr. trump may not be accurately reflecting what is actually happening here. i think that the bottom line is
he s on a downward momentum so it s easy to be critical of the brand but what you have here is a brand that s incorrectly positioned. it caters to the affluent. as a whole, the affluent are probably theroup most turned off by trump now. the brand is still strong. perhaps stronger it s just his current properties aren t positioned properly. there s opportunity but there s down market. geography, when you look, down 58%. yes, it s sectiessentially h brand equity as it relates to the business related to the household income. the brand is never going to be weaker than it would be in manhattan. it will be very strong in
certain rule areas where the household income is lower. there s been discussion of how much of his wealth comes from licensing his name. it was announced last week the that trump hotels would have the title sky inn, not trump. if you don t have the trump name, how does he get the money from licensing? he s purchase p pursued a pretty intelligence strategy where he doesn t put up his own money. he puts his name on it and takes a portion of the proceeds. the problem is if the brand no longer attracts that demographic that the people putting the capital into the hotel can say it s attracting people. i think what you ll see is actually more trump hotels. they re just going to be they re just going to be more kind of midtier hotels. which is the opposite of what he said he built this brand to be. building at the end of our block has been associated with great luxury. that s not what he worked on for
the past 60 years. less trump hotels in manhattan, more in middle america and red states. interesting. really appreciate it. developing now, we re traveling with defense secretary ash carter who just made an annou e announcement over the military forcing veterans to return enlistment voters. outraged so many of you. now secretary ash carter is speak out about what happens to these veterans told to pay back bonuses. plus, one of america s most controversy sheriffs joe arpaio formally charged. we ll have the latest on what this means for arpaio. thatedexas helped us we cld focus obigger issues, environmen le we re not passive aggressi. hey, hey, hey, there e no bad suggestions here. noatter w lame they are. well said, ann. i ve always mired you just say what s in your head, thout thng. well said, ann. bra. gooint ted. re livinproof at looks aren t erying. thanyou. e-commer businsx helped sr anth is noa ssive agessi eironment. justanted to say yoys areoioi great jo
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ameran express open cas can lp you take on a new j, or fa bide nd out hmerinexprescardanservics n help ppa you for gr at open.c. we have exclusive reporting on the fight to take out isis. defense secretary ash carter telling nbc news this morning that an offensive to push isis from its capital of raqqah in syria will begin in weeks. this, a week into the su p offensive to take back mosul.
carter says resources are available for simultaneous operations on both mosul and raqqah. secretary carter suspended efforts to collect bonuses once paid to california national guard members. let me bring in on the phone from brussels nbc s hans nichols traveling with secretary carter. let s start off with the developments about this new offensive in the capital in raqqah that will begin in weeks. what does secretary carter say? well, he said just that, tamron, this is going to start weeks, not months. we think about the calendar on that. that means we could have an offensive in raqqah during election day. it likely means you ll have offenses taking place in mosul and raqqah in syria, well into the next year. that means the next president could be inheriting two active campaigns. they re saying u.s. forces are not on the front lines. he s been meeting with officials
in iraq, turkey, abu dhabi, u.s. troops are not special operatives, are not on the front lines. they re also embedding. that means they re up there with the peshmerga, with iraqi counterterrorism forces. they re working closely but they re insisting they won t be part of a holding force in mosul, tamron. the other story you were able to get secretary carter to respond to is one we ve reported, l.a. times has for some time now, veterans who signed up for wars in iraq and afghanistan, they received bonuses. and then suddenly were told they needed to pay back that money. outrage from both republicans and democrats on this. what did secretary carter say? well, here in brussels, he s just announced he s going to be suspending the payback of these bonuses. that doesn t, however, mean this is totally in the clear. they have a process in place. as secretary carter told me this morning, they do think there may have been a little bit, at least
some cases, of fraud taking place. what they don t want is the majority of national guardsmen being caught in the cross-fire. he s outraged by the situation. well, of course i m outraged. this is a case where we have a trust with service members who have served us. they have made a commitment to us. we need to keep our commitments to them. with respect to whether it s california, we don t know the full extent of it yet. do you need to do it with congressional authorization? is this something you can we re going to do everything we possibly can without waiting for any change in the law. tamron, we re now in brussels. it s the end of secretary carter s trip. the subject here on everyone s mind, russia, their new posture and just what they re doing in eastern europe as well as the baltic seas. the man nicknamed america s
toughest sheriff is vowing to fight new criminal contempt charges against him. he says tooth and nail. sheriff arpaio of arizona s maricopa county was charged last night for ignoring a judge s order in a racial profiling case. arpaio is up for re-election going for his seventh term. prosecutors said two weeks ago they would prosecute arpaio and in a statement then arpaio said, quote, it is clear the corrupt obama justice department is trying to influence my re-election. it is blatant abuse of power and the people of maricopa county should be aso outraged as i am. let s go back to the charges and what they stem from for the sheriff here. sure, they are all rooted in a long-running case going on for nine years now. in late 2011, the judge before the trial even happened, the judge said that sheriff arpaio s
deputies needed to stop enforcing federal immigration law. meaning if they pulled somebody over and they happened to be hispanic, they had to either arrest them for a state charge or release them. what arpaio s deputies were doing were taking them over to i.c.e. or to the border patrol and what happened was even after the judge issued that preliminary injunction, arpaio s deputies ended up doing that for at least 18 months thereafter. sheriff arpaio will not be arrested. he s real choired required to n court. this is costing taxpayers $48 million to defend arpaio and his office. the cost could reach $72 million. he says it s politically motivated. he s been one of the most controversial sheriffs in recent memory certainly. for sure. it is important to note, though, that 72 million isn t even related to this case, to the criminal contempt case.
the 72 million is for everything else. he will and should be paying for the criminal charges on his own as will the three others that may stand for them as well. but so far, arpaio is the only one facing criminal contempt charges. yes, this has been i m sorry, go ahead. he was saying he was talking about the people of maricopa county not standing for this. what is his standing with the county at this point? he has supported donald trump. is he still popular there? it s hard to say. we took a poll a couple weeks ago right when the charges were coming outnd the doj announced they would be pursuing them. it shows he s about 15 points below his democratic opponent. so that shows that his support may be slipping. help has other polls that say differently.
i guess we re just going to have to wait and see. he does have a really big strong hold in some of the communities here. great reporting, we really appreciate you joining us. a super pac linked to senate majority leader mitch mcconnell is out with a late ditch multimillion-dollar effort to keep vulnerable republicans from losing their senate seats and it s focusing on six states including four battleground states. mark murray is up next. chs make in right. firs all customers w havebe im wille lly fued co, we loaelsendyou a iron fory third,e eliminated productard . les goals foreta banrs. eure yo intes are put firs wee takingction. renengur commiento you. wee takingction. t e best place tan be f awe start is ithfost : i spsomethg giing wi. s
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we re not going to find out until after the election once the disclosure reports come out. this is all about trying to help republicans in key senate contests like nevada. in north carolina. in new hampshire. pap pa, missouri. in indiana. and, tamron, you know, republicans have to pretty much run the table in those contests to keep control of the united states senate. that is why republicans are try to flood and spend so much money in these states. i ve heard a number say that the only way republicans should worry is if hillary clinton has a ten-point lead. that s not what the numbers show. but it s clear they believe this lead is significant despite some of the battleground maps that show it as a tight race. so there are two realities. we have seen republican down ballot candidates overperform donald trump in these battleground states. that s some good news if you re a kelly ayotte in new hampshire or a joe heck in nevada.
but the downside is this is kind of marginal and we re talking two or three percentage points and if, you know, hillary clinton ends up winning, say, a new hampshire or a nevada, chances are the democrats are going to probably end up winning those senate contests as well as other down ballots. because turnout ends up mattering so much. i m just not sure there are a lot of ticket splitters. thank you so much, greatly appreciate it. coming up, justin timberlake s selfie taken inside a polling place has people asking if he broke the law. up next, we re going to look into where you can get your selfie on while voting where you probably don t want to do it.
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announcement courtesy of justin timberlake. he voted in tennessee, his home state. turns out it is illegal to take a selfie while voting in that state and in many others. officials in shelby county where justin timberlake voted say his actions will not be investigated. he s a national treasure. and he won t face charges. officials are thrilled he, quote, can t stop the feeling. that s what they said. for legal advice, ari melber. i will take the selfie. do it. what s the deal? first of all, as you reported because there was confusion on the internet. at first you don t have to cry me a river for justin. i can t. i got it out of the way. i need a drink. i m listening, go ahead. it is illegal in most states. why? great question. there is so much concern in other areas around any pressure,
tampering, interference that a lot of states don t want recording devices or even talking on the phone once you are inside the polling place. if you are home watching you can ask if you are in most of the country you probably can t use your phone to record anything. you can ask as you walk in and find out so you don t break rules. having said that, i will tell you the states are on the wrong side of the first amendment here. unconstitutional people are saying. the tennessee law does say flatly you can t do what justin did. they are not going to investigate. it says you cannot use your phone as a recording device or a photographic device in the polling place. more interestingly, there is a federal appeals court, the first circuit that struck down the exact same kind of law in new hampshire. they found there is a first amendment right so selfie. they said there is a strong first amendment right to communicate and laws against voter selfies unfairly restrict voters core political speech. the idea that you are saying
something. the court ruled you are saying two things. number one, i voted. which in this world means you are telling you friends today is the day. and you could be showing who you are voting for and that s political speech that s protected. interesting. where does it go? other states may test it and the supreme court may want to take a circuit split. with one court in part of the country saying yes you can do this. and the first circuit said you can t. that s what could lead to the supreme court. this is how people communicate. we think of selfies as silly. but it may be an important way for young people to say, get out and vote. i love a good selfie. we didn t have this problem when polaroid was around. i don t know. did we? polaroids? thank you. happening now, hillary clinton is set to speak in lake worth, florida. we ll bring you the comments, of course. we ll be right back. an opening night on broadw is kind of magic.
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[policsiren] jess: how many did you have? shn: i should be fine. jess: hyou should be? did you have? shn: i should be fine. office si go ahead and step out of the vehicle for me. awn: yes, sir. bud:shn: i should be fine. office si go ahead and step out of thsee ya, buddy.me. toda sha s got a hearing, we ll see how it . good luck! , itur o buzzed driving and unk drivin they re e sa tng and it cost. so wortht.
thank you for watching this hour of msnbc live. we ll see you back here tomorrow. i m tamron hall. turning it over to andrea mitchell who is in lake worth, florida, where hillary clinton is set to speak live. andrea? thank you, tamron. now on andrea mitchell reports, 13 days out. which candidate will have a lucky 13? we are live in florida where hillary clinton is rallying for a second day in a row. she s about to take the stage where donald trump detours to washington for another opening of a luxury hotel. what does it mean that donald trump is spending any minutes promoting his own brand as opposed to asking people for their votes? it shows americans the tangible accomplishments of donald trump. he s somebody who builds things, fixes things. hillary clinton went from being dead broke to being a quarter of a billionaire. how?

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Transcripts For DW Arts.21 - Read Read Read This Years Crop Of Books 20180319 04:30:00


the main news alice. she gets. a call. not to do the same thing. but. people have put big dreams on the big story. in movie magazine on d w. hello and welcome to arts twenty one today will be focusing on books. new books are out again reading has not gone out of style and book fairs prove it the light tick book fair in germany offers a stage for important themes interesting authors it s a mecca for book lovers healthy drug which i can use to be myself into completely
different worlds. but i wish i had room for all the books that i d like to have. visions trends discussions such as how much freedom of expression should be allowed the presence of right wing publishers at the trade fair is again a hotly debated topic books should be open to discussion and open up new perspectives news reading can help you put yourself in someone else s shoes come with us on our international literary journey as we travel to romania the honorary guest at this year s leipsic book fair in bucharest we discovered a whole new literary world. and we were in taipei taiwan last for reading as legendary impressions from one of the biggest book fairs in asia. but first to oslo norwegian author us news the us start has been awarded the leipsic book prize for european understanding for her harrowing documentary novel about the twenty eleven massacre in the. the way.
eight people were killed in central oslo by the homemade bomb detonated by unders behring breivik on july twenty second two thousand and eleven. the right wing extremist went on to gunned down sixty nine others on the island of most of them teenagers attending a governing labor party youth camp the shock in norway ran deep. prefix trial lasted ten weeks. journalist. was in the courtroom every day of the proceedings she didn t initially plan to write an article her research turned into a five hundred page book on the worst catastrophe in norway since the second world war. from the moment x. they were ready to enter the room it s you feel it it s kind of a he operates cold less so in
a way the room was packed with conflicting emotions all after a few days i realize that this is not an article this is the whole book because this is our tragedy this is a story about us this is a star about norway. one of us is her first book about norway for years i started working as a foreign correspondent reporting from flashpoints like chechnya afghanistan or iraq. this time the crisis zone was her own hometown oslo and the perpetrator a neighbor who for a period of time lived close by science does house in a respectable neighborhood. he comes out of the society he was on the surface a very ordinary person he went through the same school system we have the same experience so what made him into this warrior of. you know
believing that this country s being islamicized says like he came out of you know the society but. then it s up to the reader to decide whether one from the bomb blast remains a wound in the heart of oslo. on the ground floor a memorial pays tribute to the victims. here cameras and mobile phones used by the teenagers who tried to contact their families during the shooting rampage the book one of us also recounts their stories. now their mobile phones were lighting up soundlessly in the darkness they were calls that would never be answered only the police officer said to watch over the dead could hear the ringing and see the displays lighting up over and over again. actually it was difficult to write biography of those kids who were kind of leader types who were on that aisle and very visible very outgoing so it s like
important to me in the book never to use. to surround him even the word of evil that s not in the book is just to access what it did what he was thinking like when he s calculating how many people he need to kill the get famous i just put it in his words i just i don t describe what i mean about that because it is supposed to work for the reader. but science says the trauma and the terror did not change norway it is still a country that welcomes migrants and offers refugees a new home. they are the subject of her book two sisters about a pair of somali norwegian girls who joined islamic state. again reconstruct the harrowing story of radicalization. and once again with protagonists who reject european values. most europeans we think that
europe has found the perfect solution which is democracy and its liberalism and. values some understanding in tolerance europe is probably. the best governance system but how come so many of the young people. rejected talk it. asks the right questions at the right time her books offer valuable insight into the factors that drive young people to radicalization. guest of honor at this year s like to book fair is romania how does one brighten a country that is shaken by crisis and corruption we met up with three authors in bucharest. the remaining in capital.
bucharest is a city of contrasts with grand socialist boulevards. characterless apartment blocks . and empty buildings fallen into disrepair a city at once dynamic and at a standstill. cultural rescue is one of romania s leading authors he s a masterful storyteller and an intellectual who isn t afraid to address uncomfortable truths. that people who are poor. or ninety s stayed for most of them stay poor bad respond believing good didn t change but at the same time. there is now a very beach people who got their reach most of them ninety percent. because of the corruption. corruption remains an endemic problem in romania it was
law warning of a return to autocratic rule. but the left leaning populist government has shown little willingness to listen it has strong backing among its voter base the rural poor. the. very very. big power. party has its very lights on the poorest and less and less educated people. trying to rescue his prize winning trilogy orbit or is an ambitious undertaking in which the author works through his youth living under those regime he recounts a life dictated by restrictions hunger and the fear of torture. it was the year of our lord one nine hundred eighty nine. the people heard of wars and revolutions but they were not afraid for all that had to come.
to rescue his new novel soul a new lead has not yet been published in english translation. for the first time he s created a protagonist concerned about the well being of his community rather than his own. hard to rescue says he has learned that literature doesn t just need to be appealing it needs to address human concerns to. maybe as a reaction to remain years tens political situation. with my model presence my mother works in spain she s worked there for so long i feel like it s always been that way she looks interesting and only comes here once a year when it s off season for years she hasn t seen romania when it s green she always returns when it s muddy and grey. said to her rumania is a sad country. that east. levin here burnished his debut novel was a surprise success in romania. it s the story of
a young woman who painstakingly tries to build a life for herself in book arrest while her mother works in spain. burnished and knows what it s like to feel abandoned her mother too has worked in western europe for years one of some four million romanians. i read recently a report of the un i think it was with. fosters depopulating countries in the world and they were all ten in eastern europe. and germany was among them not the first not on the first place but and it was like all our neighbors hungary ukraine. they were all there in the list and it s. it s weird and makes you think because it was a global import. migrant workers send a lot of money home but remaining in needs doctors teachers engineers and childcare workers and their critical voices. let me near burnished a doesn t want to leave
the country even if she s been thinking about it for years she feels she belongs here. but daily life for the young author and translator is anything but easy. the cost of living is high and the minimum wage low so can authors make a living in romania. i think everybody has the feeling that you have to be thankful to see your name on the book cover and down and just you know feed yourself with the glory they don t expect you to. ask to be paid for it. and vance payments are uncommon and print runs are secret there are neither wholesalers nor such a thing as book price fixing. the market is small and dominated by international bestsellers translations of which don t pay much. many bookshops also sell wine gift items and t. to make ends meet. some booksellers had reservations about stocking cuts only
mitchell yaks novel. not because it s badly written but because it takes on a national taboo. in june one nine hundred forty one romanian troops massacred the jewish population of the city of yauch program. more than ten thousand people were killed to this day many remain ians refused to recognize their country s role in the holocaust. and i feel racial hatred is undermining humanity for us what saddens me in particular is this. i said in one interview that the goal of my book is to help create a better world among my readers. out there as a thought and that was singled out for ridicule by numerous hostile media outlets when i meet the video. today only four thousand jews live in romania it seems only
a matter of time before jewish life here vanishes altogether all that remains is the communities architectural heritage and memories many of which inform a chilly ex during novel. i m not so young anymore i wanted to write something that would make a difference something that carried a certain weight so i could walk through the rest of my life with my head held high . his novel is one of forty books from romania set for publication in germany. works by uncompromising authors who take a stand. next three books short and sweet coming up on our radar. the
unwieldy title of benyamin french book i found as new book translates as i think i don t feel so great i need to lie down somewhere the journalist and author is widely viewed as the offer to leave of germany s contemporary literary scene his latest book is the third and his remake series a collection of different narrative forms that dissect describe analyze and reflect on german realities one example at vantage becker watching wimbledon with family he notes that there are not so backers historic final. is a keen observer and chronicler of public life his verdict on the current state of affairs in germany is so depressing he needs to lie down but it s going down well with his fans. a young russian on the run a graphic novel as nail biting as
a whodunit and as vivid as real life the subject of comic artists the one shot his new work is nothing less than russia s czarist past its title is icon and it begins during the october revolution. as usual bases his black and white stories on historic fact this time lennon s communists seized power in moscow it s the end of the monarchy the russian bought skin grew up with his r. s children he witnesses the family s murder firsthand and loses his closest friend the czar s youngest daughter anastasia. years later a mentally disturbed. woman comes forward claiming to be anastasia an imposter but the young russian wants to believe her. a spectacularly drawn graphic novel.
a master of soft focus and a trailblazer for modern photography they called him the dark room poets welcome to the world of man ray a retrospective in the quince for him vienna and a coffee table book are showcasing his complete works little known as that man right also painted sculpted and made films. iconic is legendary black and white photos overexposed distorted experiments. one of his most famous pieces is a rapt sewing machine from one nine hundred twenty which has influenced artists including cristo until today. man raise combined in this impressive volume. now off to asia to the international book fair in taipei taiwan the country has long been considered a reading paradise in international comparisons there are still big readers but the
literally market there is on the decline. people of all ages reading everywhere this is one of two thousand bookshops in taiwan that are always busy. there are five thousand publishing houses in the country with forty thousand new publications each year quite a lot for a small country with a population of just twenty three million. it s possible there was even an oversupply in the past after the dictatorship here ended in the one nine hundred ninety s. thousands of publishing firms were founded at last people had freedom of expression and freedom of the press but it s no surprise that they couldn t all survive today taiwan is a vibrant. mark you see the traditional and the modern co-exist side by side. in the center of taipei is the foundation of the former culture minister after a long time during the dictatorship she was one of the country s best known activists for democracy and freedom of expression long entirely is
a writer herself a novel about the civil war between china and taiwan published in two thousand and nine was a bestseller. but books like these with heavy topics don t sell as well today the role of the writer has also changed. when there is a political pressure. right. takes a. proportion or. they were. they were political advisors they were opposition leaders are there when you are about to so-called normal peaceful time when you have parliamentarians you have when everything is free. all the wrong disappear so the writer becomes a writer the book industry has had some catastrophic years as can also be seen at
the international book fair in taipei although there are still long queues in front of the exhibition center significantly fewer visitors came in twenty eighteen than in the previous year. and they re more interested in foreign literature books for children and teenagers nonfiction fiction. seventy of the top one hundred best sellers are translations. and. how it s an easy one is an island it has a long tradition of immigration and it s geographically located so that all kinds of cultures poor really leave the country again. for example taiwan was occupied by japan until the end of the. second world war. and taiwan has also been occupied by portugal and the netherlands. and that s why taiwan has such a long multicultural tradition because of its geographical location. a quarter of
all new publications are translations mostly from english and chinese classics from germany are very popular as are one or two bestsellers. taiwan s publishing houses are cautious says literary agent david site simply due to the fact that the island is such a small market as opposed to neighboring china with its population of one point four billion it s my impression working for this job for ten years but also because i think one is small china is. so natural the entire one the publishers they have the challenge to publish books that can sell as many as possible while into in china the public there is a huge population so there are more opportunities so it is taiwan mainly a market for more low brow books how important is literature in everyday life stephan tallman has lived in the capital of taiwan on and off since two thousand
and five. at first he did research as a philosopher at the university. in two thousand and nine his first novel was published followed by two further novels two of his books have been translated into chinese. tilma can live pretty well from the cells of his books sold mostly in germany this isn t the case for his time when he s colleagues even if they successfully he finds that there s no real appreciation of literature here. there are very few of what we in germany would call the educated class. people who are relatively wealthy who like to go to the theatre or the opera if people take note of western culture what we would refer to here as highbrow culture it tends to be classical music or seeing a play by a touring western theatre group. literature what we would call serious literature which is artistically sophisticated is not that popular here. and yet
a sophisticated author can find a readership hit in a traditional tea house we meet a young writer who is somewhat of a stall in social media with political topics and readings on facebook you should do is seen as one of the key voices of young time. how does he see the role of write his in his country what has changed. some good i saw in the past writers counted on their readers loyalty whatever they wrote. young authors really want to be in touch with their readers they seek an exchange with them they want their literature to be up to date and to have an impact. of course the publishers would like to know what most interests their readers. james child is the chairman of the book fair and also a publisher. he has a number of bestsellers in the program dan brown for instance or me. but joe knows
the figures and they re all worrying. in the last five years the sales of printed books have fallen by fifty percent that s dramatic only digital media is growing although the number of e-books on the market accounts for just a small share so far we have to redefine what reading is and move away from the idea that only the printed book counts digital reading is reading to. the publishing houses also have to rethink the situation and create a common sells platform in taiwan it s still difficult to buy an e-book. but cultural pessimists need not worry reading in whichever form is not about to disappear from public life in taiwan. elsewhere for that matter.
and that was arts twenty one find more on books and detail you dot com slash culture and on facebook till next week bye bye and a few dozen. the but. the but. the but. the but. the tubes
the. the bit. crimea a fascinating melting pot of peoples and cultures place a place that s filled with history and has witnessed a rise and fall a and strategic territory that has been fought over for centuries i am to the residence of crimea view their identity above crimea is truly a translated fifteen minutes on.
the freedom of expression. a value that of ways has to be defended. all over the world of. freedom and freedom of art. a multimedia project about artists and their right to express their views freely. do. w. dot com part of freedom. started out with some junk and instructions from a book. at the age of fourteen william coming. from ohio we wanted to build a wind turbine to provide his village with electricity. now on the mailing this idea changed his life a place in all that much of an exciting journey the humble world forget.
hero s story. and the winter starting march twenty first on t.w. . the race for immortality has begun. leading neuroscientists are researching ways to replicate the human brain. androids are taking over physical labor. the code of the human brain is deciphered. particularly during the time. when droids for artificial consciousness are the number one item on the market. their generation needs first began to make an attempt to keep cooking the remains or cut the first such transfer of the human mind into an avatar is successful immortality is within reach. but what price can be an ending you can t

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Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Delicate Balance - Life In A Globalized World 20180612 19:15:00


i feel good make sure. i know we all work hard. i ask myself. what is it that makes us happy apart. she what a lot of what is happiness at work. she got to keep you work too much to think your life is only work when you end up and capable of enjoying life.
quickly when telling got to the top of the fence and then i felt that he does. need it for love or when i m listening to decide if i saw people running and i thought to myself what did i do to offend god to remove. all the. we re never going to allow. us civil guard caught me at the fence well just him wasn t my day. but if you don t. like. your job i studied in by mccall bullies or if you did it my luck molly to come here so i could cross over into europe they don t want gays you see that s why i m in morocco a good hearing who don t get you started on did you know i m trying to get to molina god willing to give it to muslims. very sad i left home at fourteen years. i left my mother in the ivory coast and
when i left mali i told my mother we lived in misery too long i m going to venture out. today i call you mom the day returned to mali i ll be right she did so i told her that because i don t want to see her again without hope. and i said thinking someday things will go well. we don t live we only eat rotting things we lose no peace here everything is miserable i said well it seems to me. well you. and others have got to monitor that would like us or thank you it s a squatter s home but it s your home for now anyway i ve been here since october we meditate association i heard that you know. at the a.t.m.
fee doing paperwork i m up to here with paperwork last year march third they threw me out you know thirty if i have a labor a drill or and a digger that i dig a hole put in dynamite ten the next day it s all clear i ve been in holes just forty centimeters wide that it was but the work dried up and i haven t been underground sent so little by two thousand and four spain was in an economic crisis total work froze up and in two thousand and two my wife got sick with cancer i went bankrupt i sold my flats and when the brought a tough and orcas eat us. that was that you had to sell them all at the buzzer to survive i lost my wife my life and everything i still have in the heart of the.
satisfied with the life i lead each month amazing. sure a lot of people would like a change you got to make money to survive i used to be employed to somebody might sounds for how long. thirty years sessions and it was when i asked myself what made me happy the details of myself not a lot. and i thought that around here a bar might be successful in. a bar where people could talk about films arsenal begins it s a moment and i always think i can stop being an employee and do something on my own way but since i ve been doing it such a long time i just don t have the courage and that it s. i mean i made sure. i have a salary and social status and i worry about living just to protect them when you know so everything just follows of course i keep going to work going to follow my routine stories you want to call them up to my cheering each day.
that of the countries are more and more interdependent. we re sailing through the universe on a ship and we re responsible for the existence of that ship you know what we re eating away at it on all sides. we re doing everything we can contrary to life. no but it will really help the tools that we don t have to return to caves or to stagnation but to take better advantage of our resources yes it will move and make a habitable world that is less selfish. they namely going to no harm and the resources but we have no direction. it them up and we re facing horrifying problems. that are leading countries can orchestrate effective leadership and make any impact. instead we dedicate ourselves to useless power struggles and fail to solve the problems humanity of yourselves and i get to know morning.
good luck islam if you commit we have to travel ten or fifteen kilometers on foot at night so they don t see us get to the fence liz if you are used by the authorities of cars and watch the fence so we can t cross the street. by the. way if they see us we know it s all over and stuff it s over body until next time thousand five hundred again we don t wage war at this we don t assault them i use it. sometimes they throw rocks at us as a little backwards and with the levy a goof we don t have a team you withdraw we leave as a group but if we surprise them and they don t see a summit if we get the two hundred or three hundred meters from the fences then we keep on we run back.
caught. god. god. god. bless the alarm start to go off it s like a war in a movie. where we surprise them the movie doesn t even last three minutes it takes us three minutes you have to be fast to cross it up and down up and down off the jump and. take off running. if you re lucky the civil guard emillio won t catch it before you get to the immigration center then you re in.
there you know i think it will never go in burma you think africa s misfortunes are due to africans but not when it s you may have to look by. europe makes them suffer in europe constantly wants to screw them over and keep son to honor it. they want nothing is it the never the revenge of the poor lies in the fertility of their bellies the places have a leak mild that you developed nations and the rich have low fertility rates the poor keep on bringing people into the world isn t that they ll always be in the majority of muscle mass and lots of young people are fighting for a way out albeit desperately. and central american and mexican children entering the us saying it s those a melody you want to jump the fence and slip through to the other side they re
there because europe is going to be one mixed color is just a matter of time over what that i mean i got his knowledge but then the young that . was. it was a five i.c. if you haven t reached an immigration center you re still not free as soon as you get there that s when you cry breed i m no more suffering so everything will be ok as least of oif the was the was. the.
so like more sleep you don t sleep in and i know this is the same as always i get up at five and i get home at two or three the next morning and see gaiety doxie by taxi yeah i thought of you haven t changed that much you telling me it seems less like living in more of like just moving from one place to another or you look like a robot all right yeah you become a work machine so absolutely. i don t know what to do to strike a balance. but also have a moment to start and i don t even know what balance actually is first i do it was my professional responsibility and then when i try to find a balance i realize i don t know what it is. that s why i end up focusing on my obligations. and i. mean it s just
a vicious circle. because you cannot see what s going. that you are that the editors of. freedom can be found in many forms. but there s an important one that has been all but forgotten one of the gamble personal liberty having a great time to live with it being able to set time aside to live and do things that motivates each and every one of us even if you know that harbor if you have to go to work out of obligation to make a living and obtain material things you re not free during that time that you re selling yourself to have an income. or a new range of modern man tends to lose everything you know that but all the time is taken away from our lives and this is the famous marketing society and it creates frustration and on happiness is the cause of many modern illnesses. long
term stress for example. but if with them a woman is ridiculous there s no stress in aboriginal tribes so we call it the most you can apply to look in it it lives more happily we call them backward but who are the ones that are really backward in the sort of as far as happiness is concerned it s quite debatable who is backward from. now but they re like us i ve always likes to public housing in that i applied for it in two thousand and four they haven t got it out in may first two thousand and
ten i moved into may twenty first about it on august twelfth. my wife died for the reason i didn t even have time to hang the last of her before i went to the funeral but some of them. may be night is. not. something. that you think you. can give. me look. i m not i m not young enough. that i m not. laughing. come. easy go defending city hold an old i want to do is rent this place out to the vile
friends oh property is today maybe the stairwell in twenty three minutes i ll carry out the judicial order i know the right place for dumpsters her be careful let me get a few more sex. you don t know what it s like to suffer day by day . what do you want. i need fifteen days you know they don t want to andre s. at least a week i didn t realize we played throw me out on march third eight thirty and i only got on the hour to leave for good i hadn t even taken the furniture out of them they took everything out in an hour. into the street and right i lived for four days in the entrance hall i lived on the street for a year before i ended up here. please.
you know i m part they dug in a large part of the western system is based on a religion and that religion is the sacred power of property and possession that is placed above the value of life will go into a secure putting seem to be totally wouldn t be big people who didn t have a home i mean it would give them infinite time. or find a way to subsidize them socially over the course of years. and socially we would comprehend that we can t leave people without a home in. the can it be. that there s a sacrosanct right to housing in almost every constitution but we re far from being able to guarantee it.
agree more democracy means government by the people but which people are in charge when the who or. what i could out of when i started this without a. western man thinks that he invented democracy because he invented parliament the division of powers etc is that attitude has always been in conflict with another vision of a centralist and authoritarian one and three does that mean nothing at all i haven t worked since twenty twelve my patna hasn t worked since twenty thirteen i don t i have no income him but my partner is on the dole is a little run out saying look got to a point where we couldn t pay the mortgage suddenly you find yourself on a street with your life in a shambles. and so there was almost fell into a trap the financial system designed to this is the money assessors hired by the banks inflate the prices of people and the banks want to offer more loans yet about their businesses somewhere else they want to resell or mortgages. they just get
a young. woman with three but the the key in this than it was a lot of banks in north america were involved in this the same banks the collapsed lehman brothers goldman sachs merrill lynch all those banks involved in the north american real estate bubble bankers the lovable of them economist of what it s ok oh that s why it was the economic crisis as well that pop that bubble in the united states and alone stopped. i think in with that we have to defend our democracy. but we must not think the world is perfect or even perfectible going with but if we did no one can think about democracy if they re angry at night for him to live in subhuman conditions when the journey infidel my man. the.
a house just. got it when i moved it there with a lot of money we can buy a lot of things and call me if you could write there are things that don t satisfy us you got that you can buy a house or a car but you can t buy time here. it s a dog s record it s a vicious circle something s not working right. son if you don t let biblical definition of a happy man without a shirt on his back if you take it literally it s nonsense but it s metaphorical it s that he s just someone who probably lived without a lot to me and who needed a little that s what i was happy. for the sort of it was.
courting to the quake. do you know what poor is not a poor man as one without community as in other words living in solitude. you know that is synonymous with poverty has there been a more in the old laws of many civilizations after the death penalty one of the worst punishments was banishment expulsion. gives you an idea of the gravity of the issue of solitude that s why the home office is a political animal we need groups or. lack of relationships is becoming a fundamental problem. or in my view that this and that is. how much you just don t be subordinate to the overcrowding entailed in contemporary megalopolises use leading to a massive fragmentation of those ties and people look for substitutes for what they don t out you know that s our anthropological make up when we need those things you
may not realize that there was no one to. cank. was.
. then a part of it was something that would last october i would have said i want to die right now to do that and during those last days in the park i couldn t sleep i d wake up stiff from the damp of you know i would have slept under a bridge or in a bank lobby and on a bench by a church some people bought me a fruitless. and i used to live really well with about it going to be there to raise or anything but because of the crisis the death of my wife and my addiction i had to shave with razors that people bought for me. as long as what canada europe was just dead people you know i was lives have no meaning to this is a cemetery for us. myself and of my she said i ve been here nine months and i ve seen a lot of corpses by the events it s not just hearsay but i see massacres right in front of me here if you do so but if i give up what.
do i do do quote of what are you going to tell your family or your kids dad was away for three years for nothing to do or we prefer to die than to go back. to. the mine men thing that he she normally nobody wants to die although we all know we re going to them so it s senseless to talk about values if we don t realize that the primary draw your way is life the movie through it s not business it s not an increase of wealth it s like. this for me that it is a miracle because you can get it by life and it s fleeting. it s not biggest asset
you imagine or. they put out a lot of focus in the what does it mean to prepare a ship. we ll need to disembark on many worlds but i think what we need to prepare this one to make it possible he. is going to see mantle knowledge and possibility are infinite him way because the world s energy is infinite. it s infinite it s possible you know that mankind can reach successively higher musical keys if you put your. initial machine but for that money humanity will have to embrace reason with an understanding of chaos and globally as
a species. let me do that. what we can but if we re able to govern ourselves. we can t change the outside world but there you go but we can manage our internal one our conductivity just. even if we can live so that we can set aside a bit of time in our lives to be happy.
with us because i have two children and they are what give me strength as of what i go on with my head held high and will until my body gets out. of it i will be the one you are my son i d have jumped out a window by now that is the best thing my wife has left me. out of. it when you re here and you know your family s counting on you but you have family you want to help and you think about it it motivates you and you get the strength to fight back i don t know if you think it was. that big of a chick movie us exploit love turn it into a business bitter grandma but love is the greatest attribute of all living things beyond this planet. then you. will do it on my more human point of view. donate our first cousin is. a lot of the
differ. and says that love his creator. he drives procreation. and hatred is frankly destructive with a more conventional. elite hatred winds up destroying the very people who embrace it. but. it s the parent of egoism but he and in love is the parent of solidarity. in which you would know that s not the same as altruism. i drew all true ism is what i give because i get the. solidarity means today for you tomorrow for me. even if it implies some sort of interest but doesn t require direct or immediate repayment you them in the budget represents an attitude that if you feel that defy show solidarity but then perhaps others will in other situations with me look at.
this you on. the show model for human beings possess all of those things at the banquet of life everything is on the table the problem these are choosing a good machine. and sinking seriously about leaving my job. alison you have to do this hand in my resignation. tay-sachs to look at that stuff i actually have it all. and i was thinking myself i ll do it tomorrow but at the sixteenth that until two o clock when i see that sheet of paper they think about it and i get scared. so that s why i don t do it on the paper just such there on the table it s good if it s twitter but. you have another plan which is it was like a oh i almost it s close it s
a little search nice place she s good fishing i d like to in fact state. why not take your car was not a bad idea so how about if i leave tomorrow that. you know we have an image at that. life is full of pitfalls and we fall a thousand times in all sorts of ways you know the same privilege is always beautiful rolling up a napkin it s worth starting over again it s. the feeling of the only people who are truly b.p. other ones who give up and a few of them go. again official people who make mistakes and learn from them and then get up again i ll live. somebody they are in or. the sun and that is the most glorious way to live life my life is its own cause and me it s the cause of all causes
a lot of those. you accidentally shed some. troll. time in the filter. how can you get out. with even code
own serious. shit this week on d w. climate change. waste. pollution. isn t it time for good news eco and africa people and projects that are changing no one fire meant for the better it s up to us to make a difference let s inspire other. people in an environment magazine. on d w. land be our fighters want to start families to become farmers or engineers every one of them has a plan for your children so nothing is just on the children who have already been there all of you and those that will follow are part of a new kind of. they could be the future and what did i call them be.
granting opportunities global news that matters d. w. made some lines. this is d w news live from barclay donald trump alles the outcome of his summit with kim jong un the past does not have to define the future yesterday s conflict is not out to be tomorrow s war. and as history has proven over and over again adversaries can indeed become friends. can and trying to have

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Transcripts For DW Euromaxx - Highlights Of The Week 20180708 00:30:00


few years and it s now a really exciting area full of schools gallery and really interesting at landscapes . so the sound is so ho once the horns of many artists and filmmakers. today so who is mainly home to see it as an flops. even so national as a few hidden spots see. secret t.v. it is about the power. it s home first that typical british critic. is gone. served with john. green. and. it s really nice to drink tea from trolling you know from rather than from sort of paper or plastic bowl or whatever but this is not like a proper a proper cup of tea and rough going to get a mug to. comes and passage in is links and provides an alternative to shopping in
the major department stores. small shops often items like printed clothes and silver. much of the business here is done through mail order. lots of americans. whose try anything bar rely cheat. camden s magic circle museum is not far from the busy euston station another magical location. just keeps the secrets of all the magicians in the u.k. . it s performing arts has a british tradition on display and people. talking hand. holds. even the royal family is interested in. trolls wrote the magic circle to ask if he could become a member. they wrote back to me said yes you may bring it to pass the test person
anyone stood out from the rest at the shows in paris then it was. models with the attitude strutting their stuff and it actually had to tell next to the paris opera. designer ronald banda kemp is taking part in the paris or could still shows for the third time. he chooses his models very carefully. this is for me for me it s very important that the women are very strong i really like to him what newton type of woman because they can be very sexy or maybe even totally naked but they still emanate power the power of. his flamboyant creation essentially serve to underline individual personalities. all these outfits are unique creations fast and. fullest because they re made of recycled materials. for suki i always try to only use materials that already exist so i collect them i
buy from people who buy of old stock from the big couture houses who no longer need the fabric. from the course go to a. good chill with a conscience has become ronald then they came straight months. needed to use the bits and pieces of fabric sort other people didn t want to the beginning needed to do that just because from the sheer economics but i think what he s doing now is good that s trying to come is a static and a way in the gunsmoke is the entire fashion industry is moving in the wrong direction and i want to set a positive example of how things could be done that you can use what s already there to produce something very exciting comes of being smart and fun. rather than take him studio is not exactly close to any of the big sent his of international fashion. after working for big name brands like celine and discard he decided to launch his own label that was in twenty fourteen since then he s lived and worked
in amsterdam if i m sure in. four months and i like working from amsterdam because there i m not surrounded by all these fashion experts who want to give me advice tell me what to do i don t feel the competition there either and i can focus on what i believe and. plays last show in january of this year some of these other outfits was sewn together by refugees that fled to the netherlands. the city from this is so for the women this is like another world they have a very tough when you hear their stories it s really very very difficult moment there so it was something really positive to keep getting they worked with great love and dedication and we then used the things. made him so it was a win win situation win win situations are. his latest collection is also good for a surprise some of the outfits this time i m
a part of the paper. you could really change people s minds and i think you story good at that news story just for so much as on clothes you know what he s doing and he doesn t really care what everybody else is doing or thinking he just is very very. his own man has stayed true a bit of a pioneer to rebel references obviously. loves fashion you know and that s what we re here for. but that could be cyclical and. lotion was just silly for sure because i m lazy. with his unusual approach the fashion maverick from the netherlands has made it on to the official cause of katrina can and and that was his goal all along. with couture this is. the ultimate in fashion and that s where i want to be i want
to showcase my designs alongside chanel and valentino because these outfits are really very high quality and i also want to show that even as a small designer you can make. this or i know. i m often called to psyche different collection has specially brought a little extra fled to the paris fashion world prices the stuff up to chile. one of the best places to see how the vikings lived over a thousand years ago is the head of blue settlement and the down of x. fortress in northern germany between the eighth and the eleven centuries they were centers of trade networks between northern and western europe now both sites for recently listed by unesco and they invite in visitors to experience what life was like back then. vikings life was not for the faint hearted the men hunted for food with bows and arrows.
hand-made clothes and cloth kept them warm during the cold winters. built wooden ships with the simplest of to. the viking settlement of painted blue once numbered among the foremost early medieval trading centers in northern europe. died sure visitors how the vikings went about their daily lives over a thousand years ago. were and lived near it was a life in and with nature but had an incredibly sharp power of observation they were very well acquainted with the materials around them and knew how to use them to their advantage to build housing ships and wagons and make rope. they made a great many things that we could hardly even imagine today we were on the fourth or increment. page of who lives in. northern germany.
seven facts two roof wooden houses have been faithfully reconstructed. the settlement was built at the end of the shoreline an inlet on the baltic sea. it was a strategic location for trading precious metals weapons and pelt today it s a treasure trove found piano gests. behind me the eyes here of a viking age settlement in the ninth tenth and eleventh centuries well the first glance it doesn t look like much because it s just a green meadow but as usual in archaeology the real treasures lie underground and here behind us there isn t a square centimeter that doesn t contain archaeological finds. and we always say hey that was archaeologically contaminated. in the nearby viking museum visitors can inspect many of the original artifacts. it s one of chalets because shine is
the most popular museum. over one hundred thousand people come and usually in search of the real vikings. the museum shows the viking is highly developed from design still the smiths art for example all the pill jewelry things that often surprise visits is. a fortune for the profession but of unlike the classic image of the vikings as warriors what i find after such an intense examination here is that above all they were internationally trading europeans even somewhat cosmopolitan. to have to. be in the hands craft with very highly developed and that indicates they were not just worry is definitely a culture i d say yeah. come on. the done of a canny hate abou is another significant archeological site from the viking age. it consists of earthworks walls and trenches which in some thirty plummeted is.
the fortifications date back some one thousand years they can best be explored by bicycle. and the down a vehicle was built to protect the jutland peninsula against invaders. the donovan was the longest lasting border of the middle ages and the best preserved in its various phases as we see here the best waldemar zwolle for example was a very innovative construction for the time. they had already gone to build with bricks in the twelfth century with. the site gives us a unique insight into how the vikings lived through everything that s an important aspect is that the tens of thousands of visitors that we get each year are well known. you know with a different awareness rians you get this knowing that this is an archeological monumental thing with global significance from global. change to be proof that the
vikings were not just war against but also shrewd strangers and people who lived in harmony with nature. singing has been scientifically proven to lift your mood and singing together as a group has been booming for years so in an effort to boost the spirits of moody berliners to musical organizers put together an evening of public singing and it proved to be a great success. here the audience is the star five hundred people belting out a pop classic. the evening at an open air face and it is called sing sing. this song is a lead by chairman i m not sousa and a company back into pop it s on piano. hot.
it s fun and makes me happy you can let your hair down. i need motivation if i want to hear my own voice not just speaking but singing took. what i see it s always i sing at home but otherwise never in public. taking away people s shyness when they sing caesar and puppets have been doing it for going on two years now. and they ve had a lot of success no one here can tell if he s singing well or not so everyone does whether it s belting out a popular refrain from austrian bad one toe. or a club hit by a swedish house mafia. it . was.
he s a mom howard has one five hundred people sing the same song it s a totally different experience than any other because you re communicating with lots of people but not verbal by. and you don t have to give each other any science and everyone knows the song reads the lyrics sings the same thing at the same time there s so much energy in a. song as an expression of common culture. whether in a church choir. at st festivals like carnival. with a with charity and control. or pulling out all the stops no matter how you do it s all types of singing have one thing in common studies show the activity makes you happy and healthy.
and unlike lincoln stein from berlin s institute for music therapy views singing as a therapeutic measure. of respect each of the many of the aspects that singing awakens could also be awakened by joking at the neuron a physiological level is the same things are happening. but one thing is special about singing when you do it for longer periods after about twenty minutes you begin to produce moxy talks in also called the bonding hormone you don t get that from jogging you get it from nursing and from sex and from sex. no wonder so many people love to sing. but not many of us today have the time or chance to sing in regular groups so quiet
so that s what single sing provides an opportunity to lift up your voice in song with hundreds of like minded people. the event is always booked out weeks in advance. it s a poor conspirator in course but i used to sing a lot of gospel choirs and spent a lot of time in churches where we sang a lot of pop music but often my worldview changed and i just wasn t able to get behind it anymore i kept looking for something that would give me that experience just without the religious aspect and i m starting to think that with single acing i found that before. i was. full most of the people here it wasn t about how they sang but about being process of the experience.
this year s host for the soccer world cup is russia so we thought we d take this occasion to explore the city of nishan enough gosh it s one of the venue s for the tournament and besides boasting a brand new soccer stadium for some call unary delights as well. a hefty storm passes over nizhny novgorod not the time to go for a stroll. and even after the rain stops getting around isn t easy. trying to dry off in one of the city s luxury hotels and to be pampered a little by head chef is all unveiled coverage he s won many international awards for his work today he s cooking salmon burgers. for before the commission you know after all it is located right on the river volga. so the simon santow pie can car
property can really go to you. and they re very popular with our guests you know. the weather has improved the time to tour the city it s located at the point where the rivers flow into and ok i mean this strategic location made nizhny novgorod the ideal trading hub in centuries past merchants use the rivers to transport their goods to the baltic black and caspian sea the foundations of the city s historic fortress date back to the thirteenth century it long served to guard the city from attack these days it s home to the regional government. the new soccer arena now stands directly at the confluence of the two rivers in seats forty five thousand people and was built especially for the world cup it cost two hundred fifty million euros the city s soccer club plays for one of the lower leagues they re likely to struggle to fill the stadium after the tournament ends. right next door is the
city s most important church named after alexander nevsky a russian orthodox saint and former military here at. the cathedral is known for its magnificent frescoes and wall of icons. the icon of the holy mother is particularly famous. right. now we re getting a lot of visitors from abroad. understand that this is an orthodox church and a secret place and so they all behave in a way that s appropriate vilsack as his publisher during the soviet era the city was off limits to foreigners it was a key manufacturing site for military equipment back then nizhny novgorod was named corky after the writer maxine gorky today many locals are delighted to welcome the world soccer fans who want to you can see for yourself how many people have come
here and it used to be very different. that the more you re aware happy to have so many people visiting the city the good although it s great to have to talk to the me of the seamy as for the fans they re making the most of their time here. on local busker sings of the beauty of nizhny novgorod with all its traditions he composed the song himself. was the author of the. traditional craftsmanship has long played an important role in nizhny novgorod for more than a century office working on the edge of the city have been creating russia s most famous souvenir symmetry oscar dolls. the first russian muchly oscar was created in the late nineteenth century today hardly any tourist visiting usually no go toward would think of leaving without buying one of the dolls the company here
employs seven hundred people they ve been working flat out to keep the shops well stocked for the tourists. and that. symbolizes feminine beauty motherhood and family. but there may very few shells even our children love to play with them to take them a possum put them back together again it was the right decision that way they can also learn to count which to shoot guys and this certainly no shortage of emotions among the soccer fans how many it s a dream come true to watch their team at the stadium or even here in the city s fan zone the people of nizhny novgorod have done all they can to ensure their guests feel at home and take away happy memories of the city and the summer. and that wraps up another week of your own max now and don t forget to keep up with the show on social media so for me and the rest of the crew here max as always thanks for joining us and we ll see again.
what happened and to substantiate claims of crimes. insisting on it for spong d.w. photographic. like right. gentlemen with. any time i must latest. video never. have i got the back of the car. zones to sing along to come down to is the combo from super flimsy to the demands of tide i am very close is kind of into active exercise is hard thing about it doesn t you don t come a smash don t land on facebook in the uk still. lend german for free with the w. . stain form. lawyer. and
language courses. video and audio. anytime. anyway.
think of. all we can be the generation that ends it good malaria. so millions can live. on. north korea has condemned a u.s. delegation for its handling of the latest round of denuclearization talks between the two countries pyongyang criticized the americans attitude and suggested officials made too many demands hours earlier u.s. secretary of state mike promptly you know had hailed what he called progress at the meeting in pyongyang. rescue officials in thailand have

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Watters World 20180527 00:00:00


north korea for the first time. jesse: let me get your reaction to james comey. spspygate has blown into the atmosphere. as far as i can tell it s made up. i don t know where he s getting that from. do you find that to be possible or probable that there was a spy inserted into his campaign by an intelligence agency? i don t find it possible and i know it not to be true. jesse: maybe james clapper had different take on this. let s hear what he had to say. was the fbi spying on trump s campaign. no, they were not. they were spying on a term i don t particularly like, won t russians were doing. were the russians trying gain access and leverage and influence. this is what they do. why doesn t he like that.
he should be happy. each should be. jesse: who do you believe, the liar or the leaker? wait comes down to is james comey lied before congress so many times. his deputy andrew mccabe lied to the fbi on three different occasions. clapper and brennan probably perpetuated the worst crime in political american government history. now they are scurrying rats. they are all pointing the fingers at each other. they have many bad days in front of them. every time they go on television they can t keep their stories straight. jesse: you have to keep your stories together if investigators are going to be asking you questions. he could have gone in when he was a candidate and said we are worried about certain things and
we are going to put people in place to pick up russian intelligence. the president is a total patriot and would have been fine with it. they were fearful he was going to win, so they did ita in a wer did it in a sereptitous w. they took $5 million out of their campaign war chest, paid an. did they also do that with a campaign that paid $5 million to go to russia? we know the answer noise. this was their insurance policy against a trump success.
jesse: you have hillary clinton dealing with foreign countries who donate millions to her foundation. i would say there is more foreign influence into the clinton campaign from china, middle eastern countries, from the russians than there was from the trump campaign. the next move will be to completely protect them. god forbid if anything happens to them, there are two big dominoes that will knock everybody out. jesse: also answering questions, the nfl finally has a policy about kneeling. the fans didn t like the disrespect. trump was asked about that. change in policy. if they do kneel, not on the field. in the locker room. brian kilmeade caught up with the president. president trump: you have to stand proudly for the national
anthem or you shouldn t be playing, you shouldn t thereby, maybe you shouldn t be in the country. jesse: that freaked everybody out. there are rules for every organization that people work for. one of the rules are simple. stand up and acknowledge the national anthem. i don t understand why this is even a controversial question. if you don t want to respect the flag that men have died for. don t play a silly game where you make millions of dollars. it s a privilege to play that game, if you don t want to do it, a lot of people would be willing to take your spot. at the end of the day people walked away from the nfl and the ratings went down and that scared all of them. but they are up against it with the players union.
to me i think they made the right decision. i think there is another way to progress peace and social justice. that is a game of entertainment and the american people don t like they are doing. jesse: one of the coaches who disagrees with you had this to say on the new policy. basically trying to use the anthem, nationalism, airing people it s idiotic. i am proud to be in the league, but understand fatism in america is about free speech and protesting. our president decided to make it about that. the nfl followed suit. pandered to their fan base. jesse: he s wrong it s not about
the first amendment. when you are at your employer s place of work, he he s paying u to play football, you have to do what he wants you to do. the nba signed into their collective bargaining agreement that everybody has to stand for the national anthem. jesse: they all stand there. so what is he talking about? it s signed contractually into the collective bargaining agreement. you pay a game, you make a lot of money it s an entertainment thing. you stand up, show respect for the greatest country in which we live. if you don t want to stand for the anthem. go somewhere else. good luck making that money in
romania. jesse: police brutality and racism is a serious issue in this country. at the same time there is other avenues. mohammed ali said it was a white man s war an left boxing to make that protest. i am not saying people should do that, i m just saying look at power and courage it took to do that 50 years ago. jesse: an thon which, corey, thank you very much. a 30-year-old living with his parents. he won t leave. his parents took him to court. next. what makes these simple dishes the best simple dishes ever?
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it seems art is imitating life. a couple has been trying to kick their 30-year-old son out of their house after living there rent-free for 8 years. they asked him to leave five times and offered him money to get out. so they took him to court. just this week a judge evicted the unemployed millennial. it s not so much that i don t want to leave. it s just that i need enough time. reporter: you keep saying that but you had 8 years. i expect to be out in three months or so. i m going to try to make it with the court s support that that s reasonable. jesse: is this the right thing to do?
tomi. this guy doesn t have a girlfriend, he doesn t have a job. his parents want him to get on with his life. what would you do if you were the parent? it s sad for me as someone who is 5 years old to look at someone in this position, in generations past we were storming beaches. how far have we fallen? jesse: he s storming the fridge for a late-night snack. i disagree with tomi. he dug in and is working hard at stay where he is and he s showing a little legal spunk by representing himself in court. maybe he has a legal career ahead of him. maybe this parents would prefer hip. when i saw this, i thought which
lawyer would take this case on. this is probably the most of motivated he has been in 8 years. jesse: he s work hard to stay where he is. i can t believe his parents have to write him five letters. i have a 3-year-old. i can t imagine going to court in 27 years to kick my daughter out of my home. we invited him on to watters world. let s play some sound from this guy. he was talking about impeachment. this is what he said. you can t be the boy who cried wolf and expect to have a viable impeachment power. you can t use it over and over again against the same president. if you are going to shoot him, you have got to shoot to kill.
jesse: i don t want to be the p.c. police here. i am not going to get that sensitive. but if a republican talked about impeachment and said you have got to shoot to kill with barack obama, can you imagine the outrage? the double standard is the only standard the left likes to uphold. but because we are conservatives we understand it s not the best phrasing. i m sure he didn t mean it that way. but i agree with him on the impeachment stuff. it just makes them look worse and worse and worse. so, i don t agree with his choice of word but the guy is right. jesse: i love when the democrats talk about impeachment. why don t you talk about impeachment. why don t you talk about russia and ms-13 being good people. that should be the roadmap for
the mid terms. i agree democrats probably made mistakes here. what the professor was saying is democrats talk about this far too much. they try to utilize it too much it s lost. he stated clearly this needs to be a bipartisan thing. but the only other thing i will say is words matter. we have seen even from our own president when people are spit on and protesters punched. jesse: i think we found out the democrats paid for guys to go into the trump rallies and swing at trump supporters. undercover video showed that. you had a problem somewhere in the country, tomi. i guess you had water thrown on you.
let s play some of that video so everybody can see. someone threw water on you. why did they do that? i would like to say thank you for playing that on watters world. it s still traumatic. i am kidding. jesse: i don t want to give you ptsd. it was water and it s not the end of the world. it shows the left and their true colors. the fact that they are proud of it, they wanted to post it on line, it s a new low, but that s the left. jesse: i was at a bar on election night 2016 watching trump win and getting excited when trump started picking up
states. all of a sudden a young lady threw a drink at me and she ran out of the bar like a total animal. it happens to people in is nothing you can do about it when water gets thrown at you. ann coulter, they threw pies at her during a speech. people get glitter bombed. it doesn t happen on the right. you don t see conservatives throwing water or fruit at democrats. why is it the left that likes to throw things through the air. jesse: i just convinced you by my numerous examples. twhreeger or fruit or a pie, none of this is okay. tomi, i feel for you and i wish we weren t in a place where this is happening.
think about what we say and do and try decency. we sit here and i didn t bring a pie. and we can have a conversation. jesse: to hurricanes, do you get heat when you go out. i don t know why, people have such visceral reactions to you. they either love or throw water on you? when you walk around do you have security? most of of the encounters i have are positive. usually in california it s people coming up to me and saying i am a conservative, thank you for being a conservative. by and large there are a lot of good americans on the left and right that appreciate free speech. jesse: .001% of the people do this. when they do this they try to
blow it up. they think they are heroes for doing things like that. but they are just a bunch of cowards. enjoy, try not get any water on you if you don t want it. i get a lesson in waterboarding. that s next.
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dads don t take sick days. dads take dayquil severe. the non-drowsy, coughing, aching, fever, sore throat, stuffy head, no sick days, medicine. [ ] ed: live from news headquarters. the american prisoner held in venezuela has been returned to the u.s.
he went to venezuela to marry a venezuelan woman. he was arrested on weapons charged and held for two years. the leaders of north and south korea holding a meeting after president trump canceled the summit with kim jong-un. the president says he is still open to meeting with kim. i m ed henry. now back to watters world. stick with foxnews.com for all your headlines throughout the weekend. jesse: despite objections from the left, president trump swore in the first cia director this week, gina haspel. president trump: gina, congratulations. there is no one in the country better qualified for this extraordinary office than you.
our enemies will take note. gina is tough, she is strong, and when it comes to defending america, gina will never ever back down. i know her. jesse: the beef is based on her involvement in waterboarding. a former seal videoed himself being waterboarding just to prove it s not wrong. on 9/11 some of the people had a choice of burning to breath or jumping. here is my sympathy for those guys being waterboard. jesse: tim kennedy joins me now.
i would never do that, i m too soft. you can tell was it feels like. describe what it s like to be waterboard for that long. it s not comfortable. it s not a pleasant experience. as you are at that angrily slightly inverted, water pools in the back of your sign us. it s bad you feel like you are drowning. but you are not drowning because the water doesn t go into your lungs. it doesn t stop it from running through your eyes, nose and bafng your throat and pooling in your sign us. it s not damaging, it s just uncomfortable. jesse: it s irritating and agonize bug not torture. i wouldn t even say agonizing. i think uncomfortable is the
closest you can get. you could stick me in there and strap my arms down and punch me in the stomach. it s still me laying there and you are dumping water on my face and it doesn t feel good. jesse: some people who didn t have the same training you did as a special operator did give up valuable information. we have had cia directors say it led to intelligence. the mastermind behind 9/11 led us to bin laden s whereabouts in afghanistan. there is no question this garnered valuable information that saved americans lives. it comes down to the person on the board. i m rest flute my convictions. i understand morality and i
believe in ethics. the people we have waterboard are the most of despicable humans to walk the face of this planet. these are the nazis of this generation. they torture, maim and kill. they are bullies and cowards. when you take away their authority and take away their col are they lost that power to control everything. they freak out because they are cowards. you said you couldn t bet on that board. i think you would have no problem with it. you would say this is uncomfortable and it s horrible. but you are still a man of convictions and morals. you would lay there and say this sucks. jesse: i m glad you think so highly of me. why do you think democrats are
so obsessed with prohibiting this time of procedure. is it because they feel sorry for terrorists? it s because they don t want to say they won t drop to their level. what motivates them to be so outraged when american cia agents pour water on terrorists faces. they are apologists. they are so short snietd what happened to us on 9/11. we have been at war for 17 years. these are people who will put a man on his knees and before a camera slowly slice his neck open. they have been apologizing for what we have done since 9/11. hiroshima, nagasaki, we dropped nuclear bombs to independent a a
war. jesse: i know if the sons and daughters of any of threes democrats were ever in a position where they had a loved one at the hands of an al qaeda terrorist and the only way to save that person was to waterboard someone to lead to those whereabouts, they 100% would say yes, do whatever it takes to find my son or daughter. tim kennedy. thank you very much. my pleasure. take care. jesse: up next, diamond and silk.
atrained in court on sex charges. he posted $1 million bond so he s back on the streets with an ankle bracelet. harvey is in handcuffs. do you think he ll beat the rap? if he did the crime, he should do the time. these hollywood elites ed: this is a fox news alert. you can see the president is with the released prisoner from venezuela. president trump: he was in a venezuelan prison almost two years. amazing you were able to take it. your daughter marion is here and your parents. jason and laurie you went through a lot. and you were there fighting all
the way. i want to thank bob corker and mike lee and hurricanes a, every time i see mia, she would talk about you. i say what about something else. can we talk about something else? she was always doing it, and orrin hatch is a legend in the senate and this country. orrin, you were great. bob, mike, mia, orrin, i want to thank you have much. we have had 17 prisoners released during the trump administration. most of people don t know that. remember aya? we called the president of egypt. he released her. she was there for three years. the previous administration was unable to get her out. a fantastic young woman. she was released. in north korea we just had a great success. we had three wonderful people
of, americans released just recently. home safely with their families. you were a tough one. that was a tough situation. but we have had 17 released. and we are very proud of that record. and we have others coming. near the midst of big negotiation to the get others out. in most of cases they are americans. but we can try to help other countries as welt where there is injustice. i want to welcome you to the white house. you have gone through a lot. more than most of people could endure. i want to thank your parents for being such loving parents. you were very, very special. you were fighting all the way. there wasn t an hour or minute you weren t thinking about this family calling everybody and letting us know. we are all as a group very
happy. the state department has been fantastic. where are my guys from the state department. john sullivan, you guys were fantastic. look at all those people who work at the state department. you are probably surprised to see that. but i am going to ask you re parents if you have something to say. i would like to get to the senators and you, mia and ask you also. can i start with the parents? i want to say thank you to you personally for everything that you have done. as well as the state department. but all of you. i can t even tell you. i have grown to love senator hatch and mia so much. not everybody gets to talk to senator hatch and mia love. when everything happened last week, mi far as was the one who sansd her phone and was the one who got things rolling with
senator hatch. he saved josh. president trump: i have never seen hurricanes a cry before. it was a horrifying week and she got me through it. senator hatch, i can t tell you how much i love all of your staff. so thank you, thank you. and i also want to say thank you to president maduro for releasing josh and letting him come home. she pretty much said everything. president trump: you are smart. josh, would you like to say something? i m overwhelmed with gratitude for you guys. everything that you have done. for the support of my wife through those two years. they were very, very, very difficult for years.
not really the great vacation i was looking for, but we are are still together, starting off our marriage rough, but now we ll be together. i m so grateful for what you guys have done and for thinking about me and caring about me, just a normal person. it touches me. and i thank you. president trump: you have been very brave. we saw what was happening inside that prison. so you have been very, very brave. bob corker. would you like to say something? we are just glad to have you home. a lot of people worked fear a long time to worked for a long time to make this happen. i want to thank the people in the state department. particularly i want to thank call ebb mcthere a d i wantk
caleb mcnary. it was quite an experience we could almost write a book about in the last 48 hours. we were actually taking off on the runway, nothing in venezuela hatches quite in the same way it happens here. we were going down the runway and they turned the engines off and we turned around. so we still weren t sure we were leaving. president trump: why did they do that? there was an instrument issue that occurred. but we got out of there. josh had a huge smile on his face. president trump: probably there
isn t a time when anybody was happy there was a bad industry d instrument on a plane. there were people we worked with down there, i do hope at the right time you will have a chance to thank. there are people who want to try to affect the relationship in a good way. they were helpful in getting them out of here. i know you talked to one of them last night when we were having dinner. president trump: we have pastor brown on. a wonderful christian pastor. he s right now in turkey, he s been there a long time. they say he s a spy, but he s not a spy. we have been working for his release, he s having a hard time. there is a trial going on. but the trial is not so much of a trial.
we are talking to the folks in turkey about doing something about it. but pastor brow brunson. i hope you can hear us. we are work on it. he s a totally innocent man. josh, i want to wish you a warm welcome home. we missed you and prayed for you. miriam and tammy, welcome to our country which is now your country. [speaking spanish] president trump: good job. good job. orrin hatch, senator, spectacular man. please. i can t tell you how much i
appreciate you. i was the one guy who really supported you 100%. i think you are doing a terrific job. this shows why we support you. you actually this was i have some say, these folks did a great job. i was really thrilled with the way bob handled himself. caleb and others, did such a good job. we have good people working with us. and the folks in this delegation all very sincerely wanted to get josh out of there. the parents are just as good a people as i ever met in my life. you better really live a good life, that s all i can say. but this wouldn t have happened without you. when you look back over your tenure in the presidency, this is just one of the many great
things you are doing. but it s really a great thing. to know that we can rely on you and count on you and talk to you. and meet with you. these are all very important things. we love and want to support you where we can. president trump: you have all been very supportive. that s very nice. i appreciate that have much. mia? i was thinking about what i was going to say today. it s been an emotional day. so many families send their sons and daughters out for a year and a half and two years, and they want to know if something happens to their children that they have got someone or the united states will have their back. i don t think there is a person in the united states right now that doesn t realize that you have their back. i wanted to personally thank you for keeping a promise that you made to me.
every time would go and see you, i would bring up joshua s name and you would say i will do everything i can. and obviously i believed it. josh, your mom never let us forget but. she is one of the strongest women i know. we have started a friendship that has been that started through maybe some heartache and pain, but we are going to be friends forever because of the bond that we have had. so, you know, i just wanted to say sincerely that we are with you, utah has been praying for you, and so happy you are coming home. and utah wants to thank you, mr. president, for making this happen. we wouldn t have been able to do this without you. everybody here, senator hatch, mike lee, bob cork. the state department. we all worked together to make
this happen. you don t know us, but we know you very well, joshua and we welcome you home. president trump: i say don t mention the name joshua holt, we are working, we are doing it. but she didn t forget. she was out there pitching as was bob and mike and orrin. that s a strong nucleus, but we had a great team. we are doing very well in terms of the summit with north korea. looks like it s going along very well. as you know, there are meetings going on as we speak in a certain location which i won t name. i like the location. it s not so far away from here. i think there is a lot of goodwill. i think people want to see if we can get the meeting and get something done. if we can be successful in the
denuclearization of the core reyab peninsula, it would be a great thing for north korea and south korea. it will be great tore japan and the world and united states. great for china. a lot of people are work on it. it s moving along nicely. we are look at june 12 in singapore. that hasn t changed. it s moving along pretty well. so we ll see what happens. thank you all very much. we appreciate it. congratulations. it s very, very well.
thank you very much. everybody. ed: well, to say the least, not a usual saturday night at the white house, especially not on a memorial day weekend. i m ed henry in new york. you have been seeing the president of the united states in the white house with joshua holt. he is a mormon missionary to traveled to venezuela from utah to marry a woman he met there. his parents were there as well as his wife and daughter. senator mike lee grew emotional as he said our country is now your country both in english and spanish. this caps a remarkable two-year journey for joshua holt and his wife and daughter. he had been in a prison in
venezuela because of the maduro administration, the trump administration has been battling with. there are u.s. sanctions hammering their economy. this move seen potentially as a goodwill gesture obviously. the maduro government hoping that this opens the door to a broader conversation with president trump about easing some of those sanctions. senator marco rubio and others active on social made yeah saying this is not enough. it s a goodwill gesture. but what really needs to happen is maduro needs to step down before those u.s. sanctions, those punishing sanctions should be relieved. as i mentioned, a remarkable two-year journey for joshua and his family. you saw senator bob kosher, the republican chairman of the
senate foreign relations committee along with senator orrin hatch. the pictures on the left of your swing, that s senator corker and joshua carrying luggage together. a light-hearted moment in the oval office when president trump was pressing them on what happened. he said they were about to leave the airport, they were about to take off and suddenly the pilot turned off an engine and turned back as if they were not going to be leaving venezuela. you heard the president ask what were the venezuelans up to. senator cork said there was a problem with an instrument on the plane. the president said that was probably the first time someone was happy there was a problem with an instrument on a plane.

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