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address the crowd and to hear from the lesser-known democratic candidates. this is the lesser known republican candidates. that could change after this evening. we want to have the opportunity to hear from secretary of state bill gardner. i thought you were heading this way. want to say anything? he will pass. secretary gertner has been the in the vanguard. thank you for everything you are doing. putting on this forum. everybody who has got a hand in this, let's get to the candidates. them, come uping on stage. we will start with president body. he is already on stage. he comes from -- excuse me for a second -- hails from covington, georgia. let's introduce robert from long island, coming up next. [applause] calmly from valley, massachusetts. [applause] how are you, sir? mill valley, california. [applause] thank you very much. let's get some energy going. i know it is the second of the debates. mary maxwell, concord, new hampshire. [applause and cheers] >> how are you, ma'am? thank you for joining us. and we have william murphy, also from new hampshire. thank you very much. good to see you. thank you. candidates, please take your seats. quick introduction of the panelists, same as they were during the democratic forum, we have a longtime political reporter from wmur. well-respected journalist, lucky to have him here. doing the same thing for more than two decades, 23 years of the associated press. very well-respected, interviewed a myriad of candidates. we will cut you off if you go past your time. you have some time cues from katie who has the signs. give your questions around a minute. left, them right to panel facing the audience, let's start with your opening statement. >> it is our teeny. -- good evening, manchester. i would like to thank the college for the wonderful opportunity. my campaign slogan says it all. a moderate republican, even a democrat can light. like. think of me as fiscally conservative and socially moderate. winningormer award advertising executive from new york city and in 2016i ran for congress in new york city's congressional district 12 which also happened to be president trump's district. the president and i live nearby. it is very difficult for a republican to get elected to anything in new york city. but i did very well nonetheless receiving 50,000 votes. it was such a great experience i wrote a book about it, running for congress in trump's backyard. as a result, i developed bipartisan solutions to the nation's most pressing problems, solutions which sometimes differ from the president's. running for president is the best way i know how to shed light on those solutions. the national debt is my number one issue. it is the greatest that -- greatest threat to our country. if we are ever attacked, we might not be able to defend ourselves. we can't keep renting money -- printing money. we devalue every existing dollar. we can't keep borrowing from china and other countries. and then there are social plans for health care in my unique way of getting -- and my unique way of getting federal term limits passed once and for all. i would like to tell you about that and more before the night is out. >> thank you. let's go down the line with president body. that is your first name? >> yes, sir. , know this.mericans the lord says every american in the today, he says we need attitudes, change the way we treat each other and begin to love each other. you say what qualifies me? i already the president of the united states. .t is not my ambition on january 28, he said run. we will get into that, but a way to know that our united states constitution says we the people. i am one of us, meaning i know what it is like to be homeless. i know what it is like to go hungry. i know what it is like to struggle, to pay bills. i know what is like to win against incredible odds. i can relate to every american on the planet or in this company. how about that? the first thing god ordered me to do when i step into office is to unite israel and america as one country. god said it is already done. this would bring an increase in peace, the longevity of your life. life expectancy will increase because there will be more mass shootings under my administration. the moment i stepped into office, each of you will begin to receive your own united states social security treasury fund that would hold its thought at $1 million and pay you at a dividend a somewhat you earn. what you are in base of the stock market. basis. 90 day you can enjoy life for real and bodie watch god most of you have the packet high-handed out. -- i handed out. i'm a private investigator, been doing it 34 years. investigating the media which don't always tell you the truth about nuclear plans. much different than trump? i can beat trump if i get your vote because the press in new hampshire are not writing about me. we will see how much tomorrow. there hasn't been in the past because i challenged johnson in. he used -- sununu. he used a secret document and i have met with the fbi about it. i respect whistleblowers. the former u.s. attorney was part of a six years failed witchhunt of attorney general thornburgh who charged me with conspiring to topple the nuclear regulatory commission. they wanted to find out who gave me the evidence. for years these facts have been suppressed by politicians, the media and companies who control [indiscernible] andowes -- owns the media such? --ediate and nuclear house general electric will shock you. i handed the pamphlet out out front. i am the only -- eisenhower warned of the military-industrial complex. the biggest threat to our climate is unsafe -- trump sells arms to create jobs and threatens war. this enables look -- nuclear asbyists to fill presents politicians' war chests. with colin powell as my vice president, we will have america take the lead in disarming nuclear warheads. we will bring our troops home and fix our infrastructure and safe fundsions of for our veterans. >> ran out of time area i want to keep it fair for everybody. you will have an opportunity to make your case. pleaseed your name, so correct that. >> i am running for president. some of you may know me as trans-humanist who writes a lot a major media, the new york times and places like that. i come from silicon valley. it may seem strange in other parts of america but we have these giant companies that are literally getting the world in terms of innovation, apple, google, they are doing things which are amazing like putting implants in people's rains, doing machine interface, taking disabled people and putting exoskeleton suits on them. there is an entire industry pushing forward the human race. there is a problem. the last five years china has started to catch up and surpass america in terms of technology. american made its name in technology and being a leader in science. andhina starts catching up takes over like china had the first genetically edited babies, and they are leading us in artificial intelligence, some of the biggest industries coming in the next 10 and 20 years, america could fall further. i don't want that to happen. i don't want it to happen from china which is an authoritarian nation. one of the reasons i am running to become president is to bring back a balance to american innovation. we have a tendency in silicon left and put on too many regulations pre-we have a president cutting the' institute of health budget. budgettitute of health's . i want to say science and technology that made america great, let's embrace that again and put money in the innovation and send people to other planets and do the space industry and genetic editing. let's do these things that our government now is afraid to do. >> thank you. ms. maxwell. >> imagine me sitting next to a trans-humanist. artificial intelligence is not for me. i am happy for the intelligence we have had this past eons. if changes are to be made, i want to know who is making and if we can talk about it to them. such things as algorithms have taken over. i don't member anyone asking us if we wanted that to happen. anyone asking us if we wanted that to happen. thank you for the invitation. you are welcome at my home in concord. to force youbest to sign up for the state rep job. mr. gertner? >> you are on the clock. >> 18 years is the age of? 18 you can become a candidate? if theis asking you state rep is 18 years? i'm taking up her time now. >> 25 for congress. asplease join us in possible. could our constitution disappear? yes. i heard mr. trump say that there is -- jerry nadler is a sleaze. not ok. maybe they are those things. but if not for the president -- it is not for the president to talk like that. impeachment is a sacred process. i think the ukraine affair is small beer compared to other things they get up to. mr. trump should be saying bring it on. check me out and mr. biden should say you falsely accused me. let's investigate and find out what happens. >> thank you. final opening statement from mr. murphy. is bill murphy and i would like to solicit your vote for president. i am running for president because i can. i am 35 or more. i was born in the united states and i have lived here in hanover, new hampshire where i am approaching my 60th year of teaching social studies. i'm running because i can in the state of new hampshire where all i do is walk in the door, talk to bill gardner and put down my $1000. $1000 is a lot of money for a schoolteacher. but if you really believe in your cause, then is will spent. that is my message to my students and the students in the room. if the cause is that important, it may take sacrifice. i wake up some mornings and i'm worried again about the news and what our president has done. i think character counts. and he has been dishonest. he has bullied, he has name called, he has abused women. this is not the rule model for our country that i want. for our country that i want. he has discouraged about every friend we have in the international community and cozied up with those people who he should not be. so therefore i think that we ought to have him replaced. i am sure this will be a topic moving forward button we are going to get to our panelists now. let's start with mr. murphy, getting the first question. you are all running in the republican primary field against an incumbent president. quite certain there will be a question related. my firsteads into question. in some states they are not having a republican primary. that is not the case in new hampshire where the primaries are open to people who need -- meet the qualifications and have $1000. talk about why challenge an incumbent president from your own party. various comments. first of all, what is my own party? if you go back to win trump came and started running -- when trump came and started running, the platform was not the publican party. i want you to take a look that -- at the things i stand for. my students would have sent you talk too much, be more concise. you didn't get to the platform i was running for, but i think there is value to listen to the itas i present and therefore is worth going up and against an incumbent president. let's talk about these. bodie.s go to president mr. bodie: thank you. i'm not here to challenge president trump. i love him and i respect him. i owner him because -- honor him because he is our president. i am only running for president -- can you all hear me? i am running for president because the spirit of the living god has ordered me to do so, on january 28, 2018. he said call your the ship and get the blessing. i got the blessing from mike my bishop. my wife said what are you going to do about the electoral college? god said, we got the victory. .e already won i wrote president trump and he wrote me back. i said how much i loved him. he expressed love to me. love is the key. >> thank you. mr. conley. up to run: i signed for president against trump three days before he was signed in because i knew what we were going to be in for. think he ought to be impeach because he has struck to justice and use the white house as a dictatorship. he thinks he is running new york when he is in washington. he doesn't have compassion for people. he needs our prayers. is jesusgn manager christ. he wants me in the white house. i can meet trump. first get my background out, every american, i will vote for him. , out of control of -- mostpower, he wants of the plants are full of out of it, substandard -- that is the biggest thrill against all of the issues because we don't need in chernobyl or a three mile island or fukushima. we all need to get involved. if you help me, we will turn washington upside down. i can do it. the incumbent is a must a neighbor of yours. mr. ardini: is this three minutes? >> one minute. mr. ardini: as a result of my congressional run, i developed bipartisan solutions to the nation's most pressing problems. i want the opportunity to put myself in the best popemobile -- best possible position. this is why i am choosing to oppose him again, to be able to be in the best possible position to implement these bipartisan solutions to the nation's most pressing problems. >> i think it is my patriotic duty, been greatly disappointed, especially based on his premise of making america great. earlier, you will have to bring back science and innovation and the stem subjects to america. that means funding education and worrying about the issue of automation and artificial intelligence leading to the basic income plan, but it is also his idea that what trump is doing to america is dividing us all. that is the last thing i could stand for. we need a president that can get in there and say, we are going out together. >> you said some states -- i know south carolina and mexico -- that is foolish but it just shows the emotion of loyalty has really gone nuts in this whole thing because when you see your enemy, you don't dare say to to --olleague -- you have i am a constitutional maniac and i have seared mr. trump in court for his violation -- the world powers act and i have a case that is -- you know what i mean? filed against the fbi for the misbehavior of the bombing situation. >> thank you. let's go back to the panel now. >> i think some of you have touched on this, but i would like to ask you to set your priorities with an open-ended question. what is the greatest security threat to the united states of america and citizens? the greatest threat. what is the greatest security threat to the united states of america and its citizens? the greatest security threat? mr. comley: security threat? nuclear weapons. america is going to take the lead in starting to disarm nuclear warheads. this is crazy what is going on. we ought to go back to the bow and arrows. anyone who is competing for the -- koreaear weapons now, north korea, iran, the the russians have more than anyone and the u.s. is second. we don't need another disaster in this country. it is a threat to every single issue. we need to get involved. i can't do it alone. you need to make your voice heard. that is the most important and most powerful thing is have your voice heard and stay involved in your government. don't depend on the politicians in washington who get paid through nuclear lobbyists especially during the threat of war. you need to get involved. ardini. mr. ardini: civilizations rise and fall. when they fall, they usually fall because of money. because of the dollar. in terms of our greatest threat, it is our national debt. as i mentioned earlier, if we are attacked on the homeland, we may not be able to defend ourselves. so therefore our national debt be put in check so it is no longer the threat it is so we can defend ourselves if we are ever attacked on the homeland. >> we have the opportunity for when to answer its -- answer each question. .et's go back to our panel first question for president bodie. >> explain what your doctrine would be in terms of sending hadps into harm's way talked about the circumstances under which a president should get authorization from congress before engaging in some kind of military conflict with other countries. mr. bodie: as far as sending our troops into harm's way, undermine ministration that is not happening. the first thing i am doing in terms of our military is establishing the united states praise force, the seventh branch. the same way we did it a long time ago, right, in the walls of jericho, god always send the praisers first. i'm already the president. the moment i walked in office, there will be no more evil occurrences. i know this is hard for some of you to believe but trusting belief is true. i am a son of david. i am not one of these politicians. theyourself about congressional war resolutions and so forth. i believe in upholding the institution to the letter. there you have it. is picking you up. find that sweet spot. esther murphy at the end. -- mr. murphy at the end. boots on the ground. mr. murphy: i am concerned about the imperial presidency. what has happened is we have moved into the administration where the government by resolution and by edict, i think we are overlooking important role of congress. i will carry out the laws of congress so they will have a greater say in what is going. that is my job. to follow along, i don't necessarily say praise, but i am in favor of a piece -- peace academy to promote understanding in the world. maxwell: in 2007 [indiscernible] seen in 2001, had he predicted the u.s. was going to knock down seven countries. i think it was somalia, sudan, lebanon and finishing off with iran. some of it got into harms way. these were organized. act, it is powers ok. your question was, can the president act in an emergency? wouldn't it be foolish to send nuclear weapons anywhere, nuclear missiles? isn't that a foolish thing? on.r. sultan >> will go back to the threat america faces, in my opinion it is clearly artificial intelligence. we are about five to 15 years away from creating an intelligence that is smarter than us and can become far smarter than us. turn off the power, stop the internet. -- those could turn off the power, stop the internet. of as ahe opinion libertarian minded person, i don't believe in the foreign intervention going on. i would like to automatically read dave's cash dramatically reduce -- i would like to dramatically reduce the military. boeing and lockheed martin commit just as much money things with securing like cancer and diabetes and alzheimer's and entering into the trans-human stage where we are upgrading our bodies advanced to bending -- andt disease and cancer things like that. that is where i would like to spend the money we are spending on the military now. >> let's go back to the panel. let's go back to trump and back to what we see in washington. seems like it is further along party lines in terms of whether the president should be able to defend and -- able to finish his term or the people should decide his fate in november. and down there it is divided. republicans on one side, democrats on the other. how do you feel about this? should trump be removed from office next week, or should the american people decide his fate in november? we need witnesses. two wrongs don't make a right. whether the house produced this impeachment from a partisan stance or not, it doesn't matter. it is now in the senate. we need to have a fair trial. to do that, we need witnesses. moving along, i don't feel the president should be impeached. this is my opinion and i reserve judgment to change my mind after i hear witnesses, if we do have them. the reason i don't believe he should be removed is when it all comes down to it, what are we talking about, intent. can provent trump, we it was his intention to get the goods on biden, then of course he deserves to be impeached. but we can't prove that. we can't prove intent. donald trump may not know his own intent. as to why he took the actions he did. thee have to give the man benefit of the doubt. we may think he is guilty. we may have evidence, but it is circumstantial. and a person really should not be punished or sanctioned based on circumstantial evidence. you need to give the man the benefit of the doubt. >> we need to hear your answer to this question, given due process. or have you heard enough? mr. comley: we could have the impeachable policy, then he has to be impeached. it in case do need you get somebody in america that is dictating. he obstructed justice. he couldn't work through commerce, he won't bring in -- he is telling the staff they can't testify. that wouldn't happen. he wouldn't allow it. i need to take the voice. he knows me and he knows be very well. you look at the website, you see videos of trump and i together. know what he did? he agreed with me. what has he done with that? he has ignored it. every day he ignores what i gave him, he has to protest the safety of the american people and your families. don't think you can't have a nuclear disaster. i have got the proof of it. he needs to be impeached. either that or -- >> thank you. mr. bodie: let me tell you what the real truth is. i want to get back to what some of you say. these delusions, the american people are being deceived every day in a way you all have no idea the sorcery. in the book of revelations, it speaks about this sorcery. it is pharmaceuticals, chemicals not only in foods and stuff we eat but in the airways we are taking in. we are being bombarded with sound waves that are not god, giving us agitated and believing beings and hating people. how can you mentioned my father and talk about hating somebody? cast the first stone now. if you are asking about anything relating to our nation, we need love. everybody on the stage is campaigning except for me. joining. you are looking at god's elected president of the united states america. we all got the victory. andar as donald trump impeachment, let me tell you something great article three says if you give aid to a foreign enemy, you are committing treason. >> thank you. let's go back to the panel. question from holly for mr. zoltan. >> with all of the mess shootings, -- mass shootings, are there any restrictions on gun ownership you would support it, or would you go the other way and say that restrictions need to be lessened? >> i have a policy i have written about. the democrats want to take away the guns. guns is 300 to 400 million and half of the people who have them are willing to use them. i don't think that is a good idea whatsoever. there is a way to stop terrorism and mass shootings. it is simple. we can use robots, drones and i can wave different sensors that be put in different schools. ittime somebody walks in, would set off a message and send stuff to teachers, police. the same thing in the super bowl. it gives you a quick instance of what happened. after the las vegas shootings, many of the hotels put in these sensors whenever you walk in with a rifle in any of these hotels, can arrest that person or not let the weapon in. we can stop the damage of shootingsand mass through technology but we don't have to take away guns. solution.artisan >> mr. ardini? in terms of gun control, my solution ties in with my healthcare plan. mys one component of healthcare plan. specifically, i think the government needs to incentivize tourance companies incentivize subscribers to see a health professional once a year. this would be optional. i'm not using the word mandate. why? because mentally sound people mass shootings. this is something we should all be able to agree on. yes, the republicans and the democrats can't get together on control. we have been at it for years. do.this is something we can let's do this. let's take a baby step, do this, we might be knows, able to have a meeting of the minds about some other form of down the line. >> mr. murphy, live free or die. tell your students when it comes to guns? andt's a matter of rights responsibilities. whenever we talk about rights, that is a responsibility goes along with it. if you have that right, you also responsibility to make sure that that gun is not used purposes. therefore, you're responsible for locking it to do whatever's to prevent its illegal is, then you are an abettor of a crime. reason for a semi-automatic weapon to be in a house. downant to shoot it, go on to the gun club and shoot as that tank or that aircraft carrier that they wanted. the home. out of of aircraftn carriers tonight in these forums. mr. boddie, how do you deal with gun violence? godboddie: praise god, first. one of the things the lord jesus me to let you know is we need faith. r19, as in revelation chapter 19. my middle name. read revelation chapter 19 versus 11 and understand what a you looking at. been waiting on this day for a long time and now it's here. when you ask me about gun control, the second amendment, well, regulated, militias. the truth of the matter is, if regulatedwell militia -- people skip over the word regulated. it has to be regulated. that's why i'm bringing in the citizens branch of the united states praise force. you have tojoin but be regulated and if you got a -- outside of the rug regulation, under my administration, you have to be tribunalo the military effects. i'm the commander and the chief which means you have to deal military if you do something you're not supposed to. you have to deal with it. now.ck to the panel question from john distaso. how about mary maxwell taking first one? john: the president says the is in terrific condition. rate, state ofnt new hampshire below 3%. good.er, it looks maybe in reality it's good. i'd like to get your view. that thisats say no, is a misleading statistic and lowerddle class and the class, the lower income folks by thisbeing reached economy. economic -- the basis of your economic plan? perhapsminimum wage, raising taxes, perhaps lowering taxes. go as president to try to make the economic boom if everyone?each ms. maxwell: we have to depend on statistics. how do we believe this man in anything? like anyone in your own life that's lied to you, you doubt everything. i don't doubt that we have a tremendous debt. it's junk. bound to collapse internationally, then we're in great trouble. but really, i'm a biologist and see us as a species and i see that every person needs food like other mammals. have to get food. and even 130 years ago which is americansrday, most could get food from their own farm but now you depend on a job job allows someone to manipulate you in every way. would there saying minimum wage help? well certainly, yes. the extreme of the differences is everality now increasing. it's never improving. >> 10 seconds, ma'am. john: the "wall street journal" reports that the federal deficit 12aled one trillion over the months to december. there, mr. zoltan. mr. zoltan: i have a basic income plan. when trump talks about wallration and building a because jobs are being lost, mr. jobs are being lost to technology than anyone else and anyone in this college will have a tough future because and robots will take all of them so i believe and others,e many republicans, democrats, bipartisan plan, we need a to pay peopleme to have shelter, food, even if they can't find work. my plan is a little bit different. it doesn't raise taxes. it uses federal land. 57% of the most western states of the u.s. are empty federal land. many mineral resources in nevada as we do in afghanistan so we could pool these resources, monetize them, make it a big business and pay room a thousand dollars or 1500 dollars but we have resources to pay a basic income so that we can solve the issues of poverty. mr. comley, what do you think of that? what's your solution? mr. comley: i have been an 55 years and over i know how to get along with people and get my goals achieved sign a fair flat tax for everybody. i have been an accounting major i recognizermer so it. when i see you got to eliminate entitlement programs, some of them. way to create jobs -- what entitlements would you eliminate? mr. comley: well, i got to look them.m and go through and then you eliminate what you don't need. but there's one thing that's happening in this country and that is the working person is getting killed. we got to control the amount of in this country because if you don't, the to pay theple have fair load. to bring the soldiers our infrastructure instead of having wars. one of the solutions really is off the working person. when people don't pay their fair person.s on the working >> thank you, sir. appreciate it. what's your economic solution, mr. ardini? mr. ardini: the current economy may appear to some as though it's healthy but it's all smoke and mirrors. how can you say you have a you have anomy when national debt and a budget like we presently have now? the budgete balance once and for all, that's a baby the towards reducing national debt. and if we do that, we're paying in interest which more the government disposal income to return to its citizens that need it. >> thank you very much. let's go back to the panel. next question coming from holly ramer, for mr. murphy. let's start there. about i have a question gender in politics. your panel here has one woman the rest male candidates, the same for previous panel earlier with the democratic candidates. what do you make of that? it murphy: i'm worried about and i think that there are people out there, as we heard panel, thatvious are working very hard in order moreke that balance appropriate. i think that you want the balance in congress. the balance in life in general. danger of causing problems, in fact, i think there's more problems with the male. ishink the privileged male no longer privileged and if the our societystem and doesn't come to terms with that, we are going to have more and more trouble within the domestic situation. we have got to get them talking each other so that this is a equal operation. >> ms. maxwell, same question. what's the status of the glass in politics these days? ms. maxwell: i have to admit, i the question. >> what's the status of the glass ceiling in politics, women in politics? are thing improving, getting worse? static? ms. maxwell: i don't give a hoot. that's an answer. mr. zoltan? mr. gyurko: i have a policy. you want to find it more, you can look at my article in "vice." years i have been supporting a policy where we need to give financial incentives to women to be in means eventhat giving them money on the campaign trail so they have an taketunity to rise up and on especially what i would consider a lot of privileged is really what's running government and beyond even just gender issues, there's occupation. the government congress right now is made up of over 40% of attorneys. plumbers,have carpenters, doctors, nurses, scientists. should have a wide array that better represents the people. in my plan there will be incentives for both women to come up and also for different types of occupations a more balanced congress. >> what do you think, mr. boddie? are things getting better, women, minorities in general? mr. boddie? mr. boddie: if you don't mind, i'd like to take the moment to that question that i didn't get a chance to answer. i think it's important for all the voters here. you talk economic security, rooseveltelano introduced the economic security act. therevising it, it's called social security transparency act. i want everybody to know that if have a social security number, that is an account number linked to your private trust. it's been going on for many years. the only reason why we set up the economic security act is because we didn't have to go to pay off our debt. under my administration you all what'segin to receive already yours. >> 30 seconds. is boddie: and what's yours your piece of wall street, your piece of stock market. it's traded every time you pay time you payvery your credit card, anyway. listen to me. each more than can receive a $10,000.of over no more pie in the sky 1500 crap. y'all need to get what's yours. that's why i'm here. you need a real warrior. a fighter. 20/20 vision, but 2020. a vision for >> mr. comley, what's your innomic plan and/or women politics? mr. comley: i think we need more and more women in politics. got enough of the ones that made a career in there and as far as the politicians are concerned, you know, if you can't get your goals achieved within eight years, like trump expecting, you don't belong there. you need to get new blood in there, new strength. and women, i work with women. i have been in the healthcare field all my life. i'm the only candidate that has. the nursingbeen in home profession for over 80 years and we only have one home. family run and family owned. my son's the fourth generation. women, yes, get in there and because you need to fight more of the glass ceiling. >> thank you, sir. go.t 10 minutes to john distaso? healthcare, big debate on the democratic side. decade after obamacare's been in there are still millions of americans without healthcare. likealthcare a human right some -- mainly on the democratic side -- say? and is it the government's responsibility? should the government take over healthcare? government provide the gaps? where do you come down on healthcare? >> mr. ardini? plan fori: i have a healthcare and it's simple. and replace,epeal that's what president trump attempted. know that and it didn't work. i believe in keeping the affordable care act and fixing with a few republican tweaks. more specifically, i recommend only three tweaks. you heard part of one already, about incentivizing insurance incentivize in turn their subscribers to see a mental health professional. that would also apply to a personal care physician. byause you control costs catching diseases early on. number two, i would allow the healthed to buy group insurance through clubs or associations, eliminating the public option or medicare for all. and lastly, i'd remove state for all ince and regard to buying health insurance. competitioncourage and eventually lower premiums these you try and do just three things, it's very likely in my opinion that it would pass the senateuse and and we'll finally get some movement with healthcare. mr. ardini., appreciate that. ms. maxwell, i assume you give a hoot about healthcare. how do you fix it? ms. maxwell: article one, section eight of the all thetion lays out things the federal government can get involved in and health them. one of >> thank you very much. mr. comley, what's your solution the healthcare issue? mr. comley: i'm the only been in theat's healthcare profession my whole ite and i know how to fix without over-regulation and believe me, it's over-regulated. in lowering the cost. we can all take the responsibility in incorporating preventive healthcare by eating the right foods, exercising, promoting a good frame of mind. to come out and say you're going to get free healthcare, you're going to get free healthcare. somebody's paying for it. know if congress had done their job a long time ago, millionn't have 12 illegal immigrants. is warren is saying and so sanders, he's saying they can deliver free healthcare. free paying for the healthcare? the working person. it's incredible. so don't think that you're going to get free healthcare. because somebody's paying for it america.ng's free in somebody's paying for it. education, healthcare, whatever to say. somebody's paying for it and if somebody's getting it for free, the working person is carrying the load. >> appreciate it. opportunitytake the to talk about healthcare. mr. gyurko: healthcare is very important and one of the things presidency would do is usher in a universal basic income so able tople would be afford the healthcare they needed but i'm married to a is acian, my sister-in-law physician. many of my best friends are physicians. say the same thing when i ask what's the biggest problem and they say the lawyers are so involved in the healthcare industry that everyone forsue everything and it raises prices again and again so you need tort and you need to change the legal system in america. we have more lawyers here than any other country in the world, we have more primps. prisoners. we need to get lawyers out of our medicine. transhumannist, the number one killer, of course, 25% will from heartdie disease, is cardiovascular disease. like me wouldst want to spend government money on overcoming the human biological heart with machine hearts. there are many companies out there working on exactly this kind of thing so this is a longer term thinking for our healthcare of american citizens. the badt rid of some of parts of our body and upgrade ourselves. mr. boddie? mr. boddie: we, the government, power from you-all, the governed. we are the government and we from you. power that's what the declaration of independence said. anybody thought about what that means? if we're getting our power from you, we should value you. power is at,our your signature. you produce the credit. under my administration, you are the secured party credit. what do you mean how we're going to pay for it? already paying for it. we have been lying to you for a now i am here. every time you write your social security down, they send it to treasury and send it back to you like you owe a bill. it's already paid. house resolution 192, all future obligations are hereby discharged but that's private. this notice legal tender for all public and private. under my administration, we are all americans, you are free. that means that your healthcare a now taxan do program which is what i have for you all and that means your automatically discharged against what? your social security treasury everyhat i'm issuing to american. boddie,esident r19 watch god move. >> mr. murphy, how do you solve issue?lthcare mr. murphy: i'm not solving the healthcare issue. that's congress' business. we have bernie sanders, we have warren with these wonderful plans. i'm saying, go back to the it out and i'm going to sign what you present my desk. >> final question of the night, everyone's got the opportunity to answer it. from holly ramer. mr. murphy. holly: new hampshire has had the nation's earliest presidential so this isce 1920 our centennial celebration year. amount ofd a fair criticism over the years of not being as representative as other states. changes in thert nominating process? i crazy sitting here advocating for a change? wonderful. it is great for my class to be able to see these candidates. it is a great opportunity for the people of new hampshire. but it's also a great for the people in the united states because, in fact, what they do is they get to see what happens when these candidates come, yourn-to-person, into living room, into the restaurant down the street. scrutinized. you say, who are we going to vote for? say, i don't know, i'm still finding out and they go to meeting after meeting after meeting, go new hampshire. >> thank you very much, sir. ms. maxwell, new hampshire primary? ms. maxwell: the other night i went to a republican party and it in carroll county was so good. it was so good. and they said, keep new hampshire, new hampshire. and they didn't mean anything about particularly this primary. people in the room know what they meant. keep new hampshire new hampshire. special forhire is the other 49 states, i think many of them know that. thing.historical not because of the primary but on, let's let them do the primary there because it calls attention to new hampshire but hampshire newew hampshire. >> we've heard from the two new hampshire presidential candidates. mr. zoltan? agree to i have to keep it the same. i come from california and there was talk of pushing california up further but that would be a disaster because california has so many electoral votes that whoever would win there in their havective parties would such an advantage and that might drive the news cycling where you hampshire andw still win the thing and that's what's great about new theshire, is it opens entire game, introduces the american public into all the names. right now they're listening but when the voting starts start payingople attention because they're voting soon. i would keep it exactly the same. i think there's too much historical precedence to change anything. mr. comley? mr. comley: i have to say that wasn't for the secretary of state, mr. gardner, i wouldn't be here. mr. gardner has been a witness to some of the press that have written inaccurate stories about also bernie sanders and his staff removed me from the filing when he was doing it in mr. gardner is a witness to that and that's being investigated and i got papers in regards to that. same in newp it the hampshire. you know what it costs to get on the ballot and be nominated in arkansas? you got to come up with $25,000. $25,000. and what do we tell our children? you ever want to be president of the united states, either a or a man, you can do it in america. process very the hard even to get in there or not. and mr. gardner, i have so much respect for that man. he is something else. of time.out >> he keeps the process going here because it's in his heart. that's four thumb's up in a row for new hampshire. president boddie, what do you think? mr. boddie: i want to agree with pops right here straight up love mr. gardner, when i first met him. i think he was beautiful. process, new hampshire all the staff at the state, this is a blessing because you're man, i wasind homeless, you know what i mean, and here i am running for the united states of america, right. i have a beautiful wife and she my church home, the grace of god, everybody's happy that i'm even here. blessing so new hampshire has been a blessing to me and i and also i still got a little bit of time, remember, we the people, not we the party. a party.about --here in the institution constitution did it say we could be republicans or democrat. nowhere inmocrat is the constitution. republican is only mentioned as a form -- we're out of time. afraid so. have yet to hear a presidential candidate ever debate i've moderated have a disparaging comment about our place in the process. mr. ardini? alone.ini: leave it i don't think the criticism is as widespread as you may think it is. two orly heard this three times over the last five years. it's working, there's no reason frankly, we and have much bigger fish to fry. >> thank you very much. let's hear it for the candidates. [applause] saint anselm college, new hampshire institute of politics institute. us, folks.or joining >> do we get a chance to summarize? >> that was a response to a specific question. >> thanks, thanks. >> well done. >> florida, florida, florida. [captions performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2020] announcer: our campaign 2020 continues today at 7:00 p.m. eastern live from the new hampshire democratic party mcintyre shaheen 100 club dinner featuring presidential biden, peteoe buttigieg, tom steyer, senator michael bennet, senator bernie sanders, deval patrick, senator senator amyrren, klobuchar and andrew yang. watch live on c-span, listen on the free c-span radio app. announcer: earlier today, 2020 democratic presidential candidate senator elizabeth warren spoke briefly to canvassingwho were for her in new hampshire ahead of tuesday's primary.

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