once in a while you ll get somebody who says i m going to do this and spits it out. you see that from a lot of younger people in high school and stuff. but often the signs are very subtle. a large resentment building up. someone sort of really, really being effective in their life by that anger, that you can see it boiling inside them. or maybe just comments about, you know, he ll get his and i ll get back. or it sort of boils up. and people see that. you need to, you know, get that to the right person, the right mental health person. hostage negotiators, we used to call them. now it s crisis negotiator. but we all need collectively as a country to increase our crisis negotiators. we need to have more. and in the mill tafr, we need to push that up and push that out and get those mental health people more available and up front without a stigma. there should be no stigma to it. it s just part of living. we re going to take a break right here so we can get back in
this is where the creativity needs to come and this group needs to grow some cojones. guys, thank you both. getting to a deal. we hope they get to one, but we know it won t be easy. no one ever said washington had all of the answers. our christine romans looks outside the beltway for a way to get to yes. this is no way to run the world s largest business. both sides deserve a spanking for this. washington leadership to the rescue. i do not like green eggs and ham. they re not provided by ferries. he probably drank. before you give up on change, listen to stalemates for a living. you cannot negotiate. the american government held hostage. what would a former crisis
already. we know what happens. it s not good. i mean, you know, the bigger challenge, of course, is if we get to the debt ceiling and go over that. as we spoke about before, that is a really catastrophic economic event. that s a lehman brothers style event. west wing aside we probably would see a global fallout from that. we have chris voss, crisis negotiator, and i can t tell who is at war with who. if it s the democrats and the republicans, if the democrats are the republicans are at war with each other or just exactly what s happening there? it s all of the above. part of the problem people aren t talking. there isn t a back room negotiati negotiation. there hasn t been a normal prenegotiations before we went to this crisis because trust is so broken in washington. so that is a fundamental problem. you know, boehner can t control his caucus. when he tells his own members or business that don t worry, we re not going to default, well, these are a lot of the same leadership who
who is the best? spits or phelps. the peak of both of you, who would win? selfishly maybe i might beat him. spits s inspiring advice and escape from a terror attack with the whole world watching. this is piers morgan tonight. mark spits is a true olympic legend long before michael phelps was swimming in the pool. he won seven gold medals and 40 years later he remains an icon and american hero. welcome. my pleasure. what s it like being an american icon? probably more than not being an icon. i thrusted into that opportunity in 1972 and didn t realize my performance would elevate to a level where people would look at something special. i remember it vividly. it was the first olympic games i ever watched on television with any kind of interest or be old enough to understand. all i remember is you were this incredible fish. every time you went in the water, everyone else had to get out. you destroyed everyone. you had the most incredible mustache. it s now gone.
would win? selfishly maybe i might beat him. spits s inspiring advice and escape from a terror attack with the whole world watching. this is piers morgan tonight. mark spitz is a true olympic legendong before michael phelps was swimming in the pool. he won seven gold medals and 40 years later he remains an icon and american hero. welcome. my pleasure. what s it like being an american icon? probably more than not being an icon. i thrusted into that opportunity in 1972 and didn t realize my performance would elevate to a level where people would look at something special. i remember it vividly. it was the first olympic games i ever watched on television with any kind of interest or be old enough to understand. all i remember is you were this incredible fish. every time you went in the water, everyone else had to get out. you destroyed everyone. you had the most incredible mustache. it s now gone. i grew that out of spite because the college coach said you need t