an office. you know, it doesn t surprise me at all he would have been somehow been able to manipulate them into giving him some time to himself. i know you ve spoken to some of the victims since saturday. how are they processing this? i think they are all still in shock. you know, it s a range of emotions. it s shock, it s grief. it s anger really. this is, represents another example of how the criminal justice system, in particular to wealthy men who seem to be able to get a different kind of justice than other regular people in our country. how relieved are they? where do all of these investigations or even the reporting go? let s say many of the people in his circle were not criminals and sex offenders like he was. but what if they were just absolute vile sleaze bags who didn t want the pilots to say,
it was already planned and in motion. speaking of timing, this morning one of the food processing plants targeted in those raids is scheduled to host a job fair. msnbc sfair. msnbc s correspondent is at the fair in forest, mississippi. that job fair is expected to start in just a few minutes. when was it announced, and help us understand this. when 680 people are round up, those leave a lot of job openings. but the jobs were open and americans didn t want them before those migrants ever took them. yeah, staff. the timing here was fast. this was announced by cook foods on thursday at 6:00 p.m. the historic raids where 243 of their employees at a poultry plant in morton, mississippi were swept up, happened on wednesday. so that is pretty quick. this is being put together by the mississippi department of
victims inside the university medical center here in el paso, there s reporting this morning that the victims themselves would not meet with the president. now, they met with other politicians over the last few days, so it s notable, bianna, that they chose not to meet with the president. it s such a trivial issue when you think about it from a larger scale, john. i watched that press conference yesterday with the senator and with the mayor. they did speak kindly about some of the reception that the president and the first lady received and you played that clip. obviously the majority of americans didn t watch that so now that they re waking up to this as the nation is still healing and trying to piece together what happened after these tragedies to once again find the president in this petty war of words, it s just ridiculous. once again, it sets the tone for what the president is supposed to be doing at a time like this. in the past we ve always relied on the president to bring the
accounts, it makes it sound like america loves war but you say they don t. it depends on the circumstances. americans didn t want to get into world war ii. roosevelt did so there was a conflict he had to somehow do something about.g he did everything he could including actions that i would consider to be unconstitutional, impeachable to get us into that war. i think the same thing took place with regard to iraq. i don t think the american people were as intent on not going in to that war. but we genned up that war by suggesting there was weapons of mass destruction and collusion and the terrorists of 9/11. untrue in both instances. tucker: huh. so you are saying that there is a long, almost an unbroken history of lying our way in to war. lying sometimes. not always lying. sometimes it s manipulations. but, yeah.
wars. but if you read the media account, it makes it sound like america loves war but you say they don t. it depends on the circumstances. americans didn t want to get into world war ii. roosevelt did so there was a conflict he had to do something about. he did everything he could including actions that i would consider to be unconstitutional, impeachable to get us into that war. the same thing took place with regard to iraq. i don t think the american people were as intent on not going in to that war. but we genned up the war to suggest there was weapons of mass destruction and collusion and the terrorists of 9/11. untrue in both instances. tucker: huh. so you are saying that there is a long, almost an unbroken history of lying our way in to war. lying sometimes. not always lying. sometimes it s manipulations.