mark: so the lawyer is cautious and says stay out of it. and a couple others. mark: they said you will hurt business.l so this is what i am supposed to do and i don t back down for anything. so august 15, 2016. 10:00 a.m. i walked into mister trump s office and it was just him and i and he said are you a christian? i said yes. i said this is a divine appointment mister trump. ie said that with my foundation and i was recovering to help addicts and he talked about how he would bring jobs back and to the inner-city and made in the usa. it was about 40 minutes. wow. he will be the greatest
turned on a dime because barrack obama did and that s all it took. all the arguing in the world didn t work. that s how my mother changed. that s how my mother changed. we were atmore s at a brunch. because he had that interview with robin roberts it shall oh, yeah. where he announced he was for marriage equality and i asked my mother, who is a born again christian, by the way. i asked her, i said what do you make of what president obama did? and i explained to her and she said oh, i think, i m with the president. i m with the president. it s unfair. and then my mother argued back to me all these things that i had wanted to hear for a long time. how it was unfair for family members to just swoop in and take things away from a couple that s been together. how they should be protected by law. that was the power of one man to
guy. jimmy carter says that s one reason he think john bolton is ill-suited for this role. i don t think jimmy carter would be supportive of john bolton in any role. but john bolton has been a big advocate of points of view on foreign policy that are at odds with what president trump campaigned on during the last presidential campaign. he s a muscular he s for muscular foreign policy. he is for the use of the military. he supported the iraq war. he is in favor of military action. he argues military action could work in north korea and in iran. you were interviewing jimmy carter just in the aftermath the day after the 60 minutes interview. here he is a born-again christian and still true to his church, teaches sunday school every morning in plains. this is part of your interview where you asked him about the political impact of stormy daniels. i think in the long term it will have a deleterious effect
a lot of the people was yesterday i m holding the black cars and then is that i ve been telling you about scratching is they have you know say that he s a changed man that is above we had to be seized and that he will be a different person in fact some are saying that he s a born again christian and that perhaps will show that he s changed any note on the ticket to go those odds they are saying that because of where things are now the world would not want to repeat the errors that mugabe made but other people are skeptical i m off limits and one of i mean he s known as the prophets out and that tells us that this isn t somebody who has a reputation of the out of the church choir so to say he is somebody with a very scary and disturbing to them drive cars so some people even going as far as telling me that they are more scared of my god what than they were about mugabe so it depends who you talk. today but you know as of now as i m looking right now at a huge crowd standing outside chee
fine people there with opinions on many sides. he was not talking about the neo-nazis as very fine people. people who had a view on the statue. neo-nazis have been a fringe group around for a long time. i grew up in skokie, illinois, with a lot of jewish people and there were nazis who tried to come to skokie and there were white supremacists who keerd out attacks in skokie. it was during the clinton administration. i wouldn t say he was responsible for that. it s small. that doesn t mean it s not dangerous but a born-again christian would oppose a jew for any public position is almost unthinkable, but as a person of faith, does it offend you that someone is singling out somebody of a different religion because of their religion? you know, i think this country has collectively suffered and is still suffering a shock. and that shock is the shock of 9/11. i don t think we ve ever come to terms with it. i think we haven t yet made our