Specific do you think we couldve done it within 24 hours . Then we look at the information that we had at the moment that we heard about the event and the first 24 hours, 48 hours and you watched how the information changed and you saw that most of the time the initial information was not 100 correct. And evolves over time. So you are dealing with this evolving situation, uncertainty ambiguity, yet you still need act. And i think the importance of leadership is in that type of an environment where the information is never going to be complete but its going to be inexact. Is going to be a lot of ambiguity. You will be looking through the fog. You are going to need to be able to give advice or someone is going to need to be able to give advice to leadership in terms of options of actions. That needs to be as informed as it can be. So i think having someone like a bobcat like whos been in biodefense for a long time uzbek bob kadlec, or an individual like they been able to offer that kind
Accidental hazard material and chemical terrorist attack is the necessity of working with federal, state and local Law Enforcement agencies to preserve evidence and maintain seen security for the criminal investigation. A little bit more complex situation might involve an Infectious Disease such as smallpox and in that event, the Public Health community would play a larger role in working with us to manage that incident. It would be important to track down who was exposed to the disease and who came in contact with these patients in this type of event this is where you see symptoms they not be present or may not arise immediately, but in the doing days. Although each of these agents are chemical involved, might have their own intricacies. There are some commonalities within response to a chemical or biological attack. Firstly Accurate Information is one of the most aspect of that. One of the goals of a terrorist attack is to cause public panic. It is important Accurate Information abou
I would not say that they were nasty. They tell you how much bush 41 was more engaged, dropping by the Briefing Room from time to time or seeing them in a casual kind of setting. And carter would do all of these things. And that was not the case with clinton, but the very first airforce one trip i took with clinton, he came to the back and was telling these southern eight stories in a funny voice, imitating royal folks. And you cant imagine that today. Obama does come back, but even then it is very, some lecturing. So i think that what we miss, though, to give him credit, he does more interviews than his predecessors, has less to predecessors. [inaudible conversations] [laughter] i am not getting these interviews. I am saying, give him credit for at least doing this. What he is not doing in the bread and butter of what the correspondence do is where you take a day in and the. [roll call] are two questions, how about this, that is where you hear the president day and day out about the m
To make sure we get it full discussion and i feel sure we will leave with a lot more to say but we have plans for together meeting. I appreciate everyone coming in on a surveillance Transparency Act especially when there is so many Football Games you can be watching. I will get us out for the tennessee game tonight. If you feel like you need to see the tennessee alabama game. This event is just important to us as the wch dinner. This means a lot to you, too. You have shown up by turning out on your weekend day and we appreciate that. The waca is devoted to two big things that we talk about all of time. We talk about access, press access and pushing together as a group to increase the access we get at the whitehouse to people and information. And that is our primary goal. We also try to help each other be better individual, com pet c com compe compe competiors and we will talk about about covering the whitehouse and how to get good stories. Helping us with that we have veterans of the w
This doctor who says you dont have to wear a mask. She says theres a cure for coronavirus, thats not true and she said that medicine is made by dna alien and that women are being seduced by demons in their dreams. Joining me is Peter Navarro, always a pleasure to have you on. Well go by house rules not senate rules. I come in peace today. Just back from thats where i want to start. I want to start with this announcement, 700 million loan to kodak. To begin producing pharmaceutical materials, active ingredients which are the Building Blocks to so many treatments in this country. Why is it important to move that production to the United States . Well, first of all, were grossly over the pandemic. Not just for the therapeutical ingredients but what goes into maybing the api. With kodak, its the single biggest deal in american pharmaceutical history. Because it will transform this once Iconic Company into a power house that will once it gets fully ramped up over time will provide 25 , john