tents. there are 40,000 people there. and in this large camp, there is a section for isis family members, the wives, the children of people who were married to isis fighters and their children. and it is a closed facility, the people inside can t leave. this is just for foreigners. there were 50 all 1,600 people in this facility are from 48 different countries. we went to the tent where hoda muthana was staying. initially she didn t want to talk to us, eventually she agreed. we sat down with her and asked her not just about her legal disputes with the government. her father has now filed a suit in order to get her passport back so that she can go to the united states to face trial. we also asked her why did she come here, why did she go to isis territory, and why was her
like millions of others, your teen may not be vaccinated against meningitis b. meningitis b strikes quickly. be quick to talk to your teen s doctor about a meningitis b vaccine. orange county, on vacation. can t leave on vacation, i m going to leave on probation. say it again. say it again. i came here on vacation. i left on probation. i m going to leave on probation. say it again. marc gonzales came to orange county to serve and to enjoy the california lifestyle. he ll leave as a convicted felon for participating in the robbery
of confidence when i m in here. i know where to go. i know how to talk. i know which food to eat. anthony: in the 60s and 70s the city relied on cheap refugee labor. no longer. today, most refugees are seeking asylum anywhere they can find it. many here are stuck in limbo. can t go back. can t work. can t leave. john fled iran six years ago just ahead of the secret police. sharmake is a student from somalia who had equally compelling reasons to leave his home. anthony: what brought you here? sharmake: basic reason for me to come here was finding a safe haven right? i mean you re in a safe place. that s the only thing you re thinking about in that moment. anthony: you came from iran? why did you come to hong kong? john: why did i leave iran? the short version goes they wanted to kill me and i said no thank you. i end up here. it wasn t something that i would dream of or i planned. i have no idea about the currency, the government no.
anthony: in the 60s and 70s the city relied on cheap refugee labor. no longer. today, most refugees are seeking asylum anywhere they can find it. many here are stuck in limbo. can t go back. can t work. can t leave. john fled iran six years ago just ahead of the secret police. sharmake is a student from somalia who had equally compelling reasons to leave his home. anthony: what brought you here? sharmake: basic reason for me to come here was finding a safe haven right? i mean you re in a safe place. that s the only thing you re thinking about in that moment. anthony: you came from iran? why did you come to hong kong? john: why did i leave iran? the short version goes they wanted to kill me and i said no thank you. i end up here. it wasn t something that i would dream of or i planned. i have no idea about the currency, the government no. nothing at all.
take a look. you can take my place at the treatment facility swappings spots that s all it is. don t worry about me first bed opens up i m getting out. can t leave. you you re getting on this bus so i go and get better while you sit here broken. that was a scene from thank you for your service here to talk about it speaking together the first time by the way jason hall a director of thank you for your service. miles teller who mace adam in the movie. adam himself. from washington, d.c. warkds. david finkel and author of the book thank you for your service. i m so glad to have you here. this is a very important movie i hope everyone goes to see. this is about as i said people coming home from battle scarred. what why did you want to do this movie? i think we just don t have an understanding of what these guys go through. we don t it s not personal anymore. if we can t keep it personal