united latin american citizens. it s a 90-year-old organization that has a long history of fighting against violence against mexican americans, mexicans, latinos and immigrants, and like you said, kendis, beto o rourke is here. he s been here all week. he led the rally, he led the march, and he was at the very front joining in the chants for gun reform now. he spoke at the rally, and he called for common sense gun reform legislation. we talked to people before the march, and i want you to hear what they had to say. i grew up in the 60s and 70s, the civil rights movement and the chicano movement of that time, and here we are back to square one. we ve got racist tendencies as we did in the 50s and 60s and 70s. i did not think that i would ever see this again. we came here to show our
whether they will or not remains to be seen. number two, on the issue of having outside counsel, there is a president here. it happened in iran contra, all through the 50s and 60s and 70s. and getting outside counsel would be both sides. he said without side counsel s experience in sexual harassment and assault with particular skill should be employed to pose questions at the hearings. one for the republicans and one for the democrats. so it is not without precedent. there are people who have argued on both sides. it makes sense. but what is going on here, as i understand it, is that the senators are really going to take a backseat to an outsider. and there is an awful lot of secrecy. we found out late last night who it was going to be. i ve been involved in important hearings before. i have never considered
hydrogen bomb-powered north korea, why would they give them little bits, if you will, or give them the know-how to build this? well, they ve done it since the 50s and 60s and 70s. today i think north korea has really advanced its knowledge, not necessarily with china helping, but china does not have interest in nuclear north korea. it s just that china s interests is so different from ours in that their priority number one is not letting the north korean regime collapse. so it s not that they want nuclear north korea. but where our priority number one is not letting north korea go nuclear, china s priority and interest number one is stability and preventing region collapse. and that will lead to unification. south korea-led unification and unified korea that s pro-united states, obviously. as we look at that moving
after a big push on infrastructure in the 50s and 60s has sort of let some of this stuff slide. in places like china, their terminals work better than ours do. they have high-speed rail. america has a lot of infrastructure that looks like it was built in the 50s and 60s and 70s and that s what needs fixing. reporter: and, again, i can t emphasize enough that is not something that s a particularly controversial point of view. not a lot of folks disagree that this country needs help with the infrastructure. the devil is in the details, right? who pays for it. reporter: who does it and how you pay for it. the president has been talking about what you re seeing coming up a little bit in these conversations today with regard to what he s doing upstairs is trying to get private-sector folks on board, trying to bring people into the fold who can help on these kinds of projects and to sort of jump-start the
retail stores, then you put the police overlay on it. so it s the aggregate of all the data that we can command here to suggest there are tremendously difficult things that black people and brown people and other poor people have to deal with who are people of color. and i ll tell you what else, chris, which is amazing to me, is that what many of our white brothers and sisters don t understand again is that the same kind of arguments they re making now were made against martin luther king jr. you re an interloper, you re exaggerating, you re addicted to the media, you re coming into places where black people get along with white people without your kind of intervention, there s not much racism here, you re making it up. the same thing was said in the 50s and 60s and 70s. i know. i ve done the history. i know what was said. martin luther king jr. had a letter written to him by, what, seven protestant clergy and a rabbi. you know, you re creating trouble, you re creating tension, this