difference. it would have in my life. sherrod, you have a lovely child. last word to you, andy. i have a minute. jm all for this and let me tell you why. i don t live in san francisco. let them try it and see what it works. i don t care. that s my feeling on san francisco. let them do whatever they want. the whole city smells like feces right now. that is not fair to harvey milk. syringes are legal so they can hand out you is hand out syringes. crack pipes are illegal. are they? yes. i don t know if the city can hand out something the city itself makes illegal. they say they will do it even though it violates drug laws. swree to take a break. we talked for 20 minutes. that was a silly topic.
politically, can hosni mubarak survive th if he doesn t speak soon, richard? reporter: well, when he is going to speak is unclear. we were told and there was an announcement on state television that he would speak imminently. now, that was several hours. excuse me, there s still a lot of tear gas here in the air. a lot of it just sort of lingers here. this entire city smells of that caustic burning smell of the tear gas. which, by the way, is produced by the united states. and that s something the protesters were very upset about. some of them were holding up the canisters in my face and i could real clearly on the canisters the kind of gas it was and it said made in the usa. so this protest is against mubarak, but it is also against american policy, it is against a feeling that the government has not been looking after the people. can mubarak survive? i think it depends when he comes