temporary, and the business cuts were well, that all depends on you guys, you can actually cut them or make them permanent if you want, right? you can make them permanent in congress, can t you? well, yeah, why do we know the did why do we not do that in the first place. do it for business and for individuals and that s what we need to do. by the way, if you re going to ask me about bonuses, i agree bonuses are good. i m happy that bonuses were given out. david: you wouldn t call them crumbs? you know, because, and you know if you give somebody a bonus, there are some people in my district that live check by check, but you can t you know, you can t plan on a one-time bonus or do a retirement on a one-time bonus. david: but it ain t crumbs and it ain t bad. that s what a lot of people are saying. i and congressman, the jobs, we had these extraordinary jobs numbers on friday, and we ve had some other good economic news as
president, rigattacking the preemptive order of the country. my law office just texted to me which i think is an important point. his point is informants are not always as clear as the snow. just the opposite. so you want to say, well, steele was dealing with democrats or was paid by democrats. i mean, you can get good information from sources who come at you with a bias one way or another, can t you? that s the whole nature of these things. remember, you re if you re paying an informant to give you information in a criminal organization, trust me, that person is committing or has committed crimes prior to that in order to get there. so veracity is always a little bit in question. that s why you would filter in other aspects of this, which they don t tell you that information. i think that s a good point. we have a new statement from
i will knock all of your fronts out, bitch. knock you down a size, whore. sit down. you don t feed nobody here, you do nothing right to nobody, [ bleep ] treat them like dogs, all you do is treat people like dogs in here, treat them hike dogs. are you done so i can explain? yes, ma am, i m done. okay. chow time for now i am. i m not going to talk if you re going to keep talking over me. you can just sit in here and scream and yell all you want. i m trying to explain it to you. we just came on shift. chow is on the floor. you will be fed in a i m upset because that guy said i wasn t going to be in here long. i don t want to be in here. mr. shepherd, officer shepherd i can t do what happened on the first shift or the other shift. there you go, so now all you can do is keep me in this [ bleep ] till monday, can t you? right. ask that s what s going to happen? right. there you go.
translator: yes, you have confirmed. as of now i m still using my old teeth. what is this, 20th? this is november the 20th, 1985. this is in geneva for a reception for gorbachev. i forget his title. what is gorbachev s title? secretary general. secretary general of the people s republic socialist socialist the union of socialists socialist, communist russia. [speaking foreign language]. how s it going? mr. reagan, how s the meeting going? we haven t started. how did it go yesterday? fine. are you getting along? you can see that, can t you? that s a picture. tell us. gorbachev seems to be most
teeth. what is this, 20th? this is november the 20th, 1985. this is geneva for a reception for gorbachev. i forget his title. what is gorbachev s title? secretary general. secretary general of the people s republic socialist socialist the union of socialists socialist, commie russia. [speaking foreign language]. how s it going? mr. reagan, how s the meeting going? we haven t started. how did it go yesterday? fine. are you getting along? you can see that, can t you? that s a picture. tell us. gorbachev seems to be most confident that he can outperform