we ve spent decades developing these markets. let us have access to them. end the trade war. the best way to win a trade war is don t fight the thing. when you choofight a war of choice, and say, let s solve it by gold plated crunches, it s not going to work. the president liked the montage? probably not. today, saying, every time i see a weak politician asking to stop trade talks or the use of tariffs to counter unfair tariffs, i wonder, what can they be thinking? are we going to continue and let our farmers and country get ripped off? lost $817 billion on trade last year. no weakness. i m joined by the commissioner of the conservative forum. back with me, jonathan allen and shannon, both who have written about this. your reaction to the president s
i. think. the problem we have is that we live in a very image driven society and so we re kind of under the tyranny of the image already so everybody just wants to see everything your making this film the first question you asked is what images of you go you know we should go along with that for me i d be happy just to see a blank screen and listen. so if you listen to my music at the beginning it s quite naive so starts. crunches and then you hear peppercorn.
a blank screen and listen. if you listen to my music at the beginning it s quite naive so it starts with apple crunches and then you hear peple. i think that it was important where you recorded so recorded sounds inside the british museum and then in the sewers underneath london and in hot air balloons. and so i started to think about not only the sounds themselves but where they were recorded. i think every sound is music i think it s just about i understand where our perception or description of what music is. that s what i think is to fill. the seat and see the shape. thousand and nine and i went to recorded a page been born and then followed it through its life one last record is death but the record it didn t push it and then cooked and ate and. the
the epa are saying, is that people are not being replaced. even under budget cuts that led to buyouts and departures under the obama administration, positions were backfilled. that s not really happening anymore. and, in fact, more cuts are expected down the line. this 700, this chunk of people leaving in a very fast amount of time, that s a beginning not an end. and what do the scientists you talk to, what do they say the staff reduction, especially when it comes to scientists, means to the future of public health in this country? they re worried. right now there is a lot of concern and it s hard to see where the problem areas specifically are going to be because it s still the early days. but a couple of examples that were pointed out to me, for example, are just huge crunches in areas. for example, i talked to a
i don t have a number directly in front of me specifically not african-american but i can say, again, we have a very diverse team at the white house, certainly a very diverse team in the press office and it s something that we strive for every day, is to add and grow, to be more diverse and more representative of the country at large and we re going to continue to do that. cnn s abby phillips is joining us from the white house. abby, has senator sanders gotten back to anyone about specific numbers when it comes to diversity in the white house? reporter: she hasn t, anderson. we haven t heard much from the white house about that after the briefing but we did our own number crunches and to lay it out here for you, when omarosa left, she left as assistant to the president, the second highest level of seniority in this white house. they make about $180,000 a year. there are only about two dozen people with that title. with her gone, there are no african-americans gone with that seniori