well i just happen to believe that people are not stupid. we have the purveyors of hatred who take every single incident between people of two races and try to make a race war out of it. when i take someone to the operating room i m actually operating on the thing that makes them who they are. the skin doesn t make them who they are, the hair doesn t make them who they are and it s time for us to move beyond that because well i haven t said anything about me being the only one to do anything so let me try that. i m the only one to separate siamese twins. the only one to operate on babies while they were still in the mother s womb. the only one to take out half of a brain although you would think if you go to washington that someone had beat me to it. joining me now, retired pediatric neurosurgeon dr. ben carson.
idiots. well i just happen to believe that people are not stupid. we have the purveyors of hatred who take every single incident between people of two races and try to make a race war out of it. when i take someone to the operating room i m actually operating on the thing that makes them who they are. the skin doesn t make them who they are, the hair doesn t make them who they are and it s time for us to move beyond that because well i haven t said anything about me being the only one to do anything so let me try that. i m the only one to separate siamese twins. the only one to operate on babies while they were still in the mother s womb. the only one to take out half of a brain although you would think if you go to washington that someone had beat me to it. joining me now, retired pediatric neurosurgeon dr. ben
deserve the same constitutional rights as americans. you re not alone in that feeling. final topic we ll talk about leadership and messaging. charles just mentioned ben carson. here s the doctor right now. i was asked by an npr reporter once why don t i talk about race that often. i said it s because i m a neurosurgeon. she thought that was a strange response. you see when i take somebody to the operating room i m operating on the thing that makes them who they are. the skin doesn t make them who they are. the hair doesn t make them who they are. and it s time for us to move beyond that. great sound bite. lisa, regarding the actual you have a paddle right there. regarding messaging and leadership who was your favorite? i think it was actually senator marco rubio. the reason being he came into the debate at a deficit on this issue. that s one of the knocks against him he done have much experience as someone as jeb bush or john kasich being governor. he was able to articulate i
the hair doesn t make them who they are. it is time for us to move beyond. [applause] jon: talk about with our media panel today. judith miller is a pulitzer prize-winning investigative reporter and author. ellen ratner, bureau chief for talk radio news service. both are fox news contributors. we want to move away from the who won, who lost kind of thing and talk about how the media are covering the aftermath of debate or the debate itself and the aftermath. ellen, i know you were there in the press room in cleveland last night. what is your takeaway? my takeaway we now know there have been studies done in previous elections that say that press coverage actually does influence people. so why hasn t the media this time around looked at what was going on in the press room last night when frankly a lot of people were laughing and enjoying what donald trump had to say? so i actually think that there is going to be some, media critical of him but i m not so sure that that influences peopl
and put the hot air into the hot air balloon and the balloon rises. the bubbling air goes up into the sky and then runs into a cold layer above us and it just keeps going up and up and up. it can go 30, 40,000 feet and then they can rotate. these storms have been moving at a very strange direction today. they have been moving almost from the northwest to the southeast. and that tells me there s more shear in the atmosphere. any big storm that is all by itself, that one there, that one there, that one there, not competing with other moisture can rotate and produce a tornado at any time. it s the heat of the day that makes them go during the day. it s the cool of the night that makes them calm down because the air doesn t want to rise at night. it actually sinks. for folks in the d.c./metro area, with the tornado warnings popping up, people should take shelter. i see another one here. this is another place that i