i think so. being in the locker room full of guys i think it would be a unanimous vote to be out there and say, no, soccer is what has brought us altogether and brings the world together and show we ll fight this back. when you play a match with dignitaries present and just think of it, they re playing in wembley with the future king of england, the current prime minister, the german match was supposed to take place with the german chancellor in the stands, i guess it s a curiousty and in the back of your mind and a certain point your mind gets soccer has an interesting way of focusing the mind directly to the play on the pitch, right? yeah. absolutely. you re always, you know, astounded and it s fantastic to see the people and the president or the chancellor or whoever it may be, the leader of your country, supporting you at a match and i know being played
you push back. you obviously take down a lot of people and it stops? this is how i explain it, hey, we won that game. all right. good deal. moralee goes up. i think all of us could feel it still wasn t over yet. that was just the probe. they are going to see our defenses and they are going to be coming back with a bigger force. but that s what we would do. there is a big break then. two hours, two and a half hours. at what point do you hear about ambassador stevens? there was a ds agent up on the building with jack. and he got a phone call. and that s how we found out that he was at the hospital. by 1:00 a.m. local looters and curiousty seekers have entered the consulate grounds and infiltrated the safe haven. six apparently good samaritans come across an unresponsive man. they take him to the benghazi medical center where he s worked on for 45 minutes before being
just drawing a crowd doesn t mean you re going to get elected president of the united states. there s a curiousty of what the hell is he going to say next. that s fine but it doesn t get you elected president of the united states. what point does it turn? those people who have come out so strongly for donald trump, is it not when the voting begins? if we re looking at numbers in, okay, the iowa caucus is february 1st. new hampshire primary is eight days later. if we re look at numbers in february like the numbers we ve seen the last month, two months, three months then this theory goes out the window. i think we re seeing this thing run the course.
have you picked up what makes somebody succeed, what makes them excel? encapsulated in this book in a way, because the common thread is curiosity. any of these people whether they re scientist ss, or in medicine, serm in the work die all breakthroughs come through curiousty, by using your curiosity as a super power a as tool to enter the psyche of others. living and enter that psyche you require them sometimes to let down their shell. it was fastencinateing when you talked to michael jackson. you re going to have to take off the glove because i can t have a conversation with a guy that s wearing just one glove. michael jackson was the biggest pop icon of the world but knew he to be able to talk about the creation of music. i mean, i melt like he could be heats mozart you know
to divulge certain things about yourself and restrict other thing things. when you get to know someone, then you divulge more and more, and this is the nature of privacy. we choose to di vvulge what we want, and we can t have everybody knows everything as that would be chaos. is there software available to the protect us when we shop and our privacy online? well, it is not just the software, martin, but how do we protect ourselves from ourselves. these hacks were not done by the high-tech people using software and hardware, and these attacs s were done using the frailties of human beings, and curiousty, and people break into the corporations not by breaking the encryption all of the time, but by dropping a thumb drive in front of a card that is owned by an overweight secretary on the