single permanent infrastructure. all kinds of infrastructure. they need roads that go parallel to the borders so they don t have to go out and around, they need all kinds of stuff, and this is the most important, impacted area of the border. tucker: let me ask. you took that shot, it shows a chicken wire fence. > that is a smuggling trail under the fence. tucker: is that border? that s not the border. that is 70 miles in from the border, believe it or not. up around the checkpoint of the border patrol has so the smugglers let people off before the checkpoint, they pick them up on the other side of the checkpoint. tucker: what kind of affect what a part of happen as part o texas? there is already some fencing that is comparable to a wall anyway. but it s hard to do it there because the river snakes around and around. where do you put it? theree are americans on the othr side of the wall that didn t like arizona.l. it is much more difficult. it would help in certain areas,
they do not have a single permanent infrastructure of the camera structures. they need roads. parallel to the border so they do not have to go out and around to chase people. they need all kinds of stuff. this is the most important impacted area of the border. tucker: let me ask. there is a picture of the screen. you took the shot. it shows chicken wire fence. right there. that is a smuggling trail under the fence. tucker: is that the border right there? no, that s not the border. that s 70 miles in from the border believe it or not up around the checkpoint that the border control has so the smugglers let people off before the checkpoint. they go around the, they pick them up on the other side of the checkpoint. tucker: what kind of affects wooded border wall having as part of texas? there is already fencing comparable to a border wall. it s hard to do it there. the river snakes around and around. where do you put it. wherever you put it, there are americans on the other si
part of it too is you had to be innovators pb you had to fix something with chicken wire. kiwi engine ut. they are constantly looking for new ways to thumb their noses at gravity. sometimes this involves a mountain. sometimes it s a bridge. adrenalin is a heck of a drug. it is. and that s why people come to new zealand to do things like this. this is torrey she is a tas main yan dare devil. when did you start throwing yourself off things. i started about 15 years ago skiing off things as fast as i could, riding my bike driving my car it s an afflict shun. what s the pull here. it s physically stunning you can get away with pushing the limits and pursuing your boundaries as a human seeing what s possible what s not and having fun doing it. exhibit a, the karawa bridge.
have to fix something with a piece of chicken wire. kiwi ingenuity. they are constantly looking for new ways to thumb their noses at gravity. sometimes this involves a mountain, sometimes it s a bridge. adrenalin is a heck of a drug and that s why people come to new zealand to do things like this. this is tory she s a tazmanian dare devil. i started about 15 years ago skiing off things as fast as i could, it s an affliction for sure. and why here? what was it magnetic pull to this place? it s physically stunning but there s a freedom here. you can get away with pushing the limits and pursuing your boundaries and having fun doing it. we have freed toom to do what w
that s like harry in his cupboard, i suppose why did i put harry in the cupboard? because this is my fear, being trapped and being powerless, just powerless to get out of that space. oh, my gosh. christiane, so candid. it really is. talk about being powerless. yet a woman who really does have a huge amount of power. and she s putting that power, basically her money where her mouth is. not only is she still continuing in the creative sphere with her film and theaters and that lost manuscript, whether it will ever be published. she s doing this incredible humanitarian work that came to her when she first saw an institutionalized kid behind chicken wire, barbed wire in the early 2000s. she s been doing this a decade or so. so many of us think that kids in orphanages must have no parents but in reading the research and what she talks about is they do and sometimes