russia back together, who reunited some of the empire, reversing the great injustices he sees as they happened in 1991 when the soviet union broke apart. that has less to do with us and more to do with him and more to do with his sense of his own historical mission and drive. didn t go to war because he didn t need to. that s amazing. peter baker, lieutenant colonel alexander vindman and tim miller, thank you all so, so much for starting us off this hour. claire sticks around. when we come back, what are we learning about the resignation of two top prosecutors investigating the trump org here in new york? where that probe goes from here is next. in new york? where that probe goes from here is next.
people. ok. i feel that he needs to tone his rhetoric down so because of that i naturally am not sure i will vote for him again. martha: let s say it was joe biden and president trump and you are going it walk into the voting booth tomorrow. still vote for trump. martha: sally, also from north carolina. yes. martha: raleigh-durham area. i loved trump from the very first moment. i grew up with a father who had very vigorous conversations with me about how the country should be run and i would always say why doesn t it run like a business? so for that reason, i like everything he s doing for our country. i think he makes promises. he keeps them. he s not a professional politician and i see the country going in a direction that without his leadership scares me. i didn t go to war. i wasn t part of any great political movement but i m certainly going to be in this fight and i m going to fight to get him re-elected and make sure
evolutionary terms if trauma were incapacitating for a whole lifetime the human race wouldn t exist. so clearly as humans we re wired to overcome trauma or we couldn t have survived. so on this memorial day are we making any progress towards being a less war torn universe? because of war, because of climate change i think unfortunately in the next 100 years or so there will be a lot of conflict in the world. what do you want people to get out of watching tonight? we are a very powerful, wealthy nation and it has been necessary to go to war. i think what people need to get out of this is whether you agree with the war or not the soldiers have been sent by us. it is our war. even if you don t like it, it is our war. the moral and emotional
hood and sisterhood and all of these things that have made humans human for a very long time. we like to think that war is an abereration. it is universal. we try really hard to keep combat at a distance. but when we talk about war we are talking about what it means to be human. sebastian younger joins us now. in that little clip you raise provocative ideas that we think of it as an aberration but it has been with us forever. war has been part of the human experience for a very long time. what will we learn tonight? there is a particular psychological and emotional experience that people go through in preparing for war. it is true for a tribal society and industrial society like our own. there is a particular experience
consequences of fighting a war are under gone by the soldiers, by the veterans but they should be owned by the population. i think this film makes it clear like this is one big group project. when people come back from war they have a lot of advantages other people don t have that didn t go to war and they have a lot of deficits. i think that is a really valuable lesson. i think we learned some of that after vietnam. we can be very distant still from the soldiers in our country who are fighting the war depending on where we live. one way of distancing yourself is over heroizing them and turning them into too much of a hero. you don t want tovilleinize them and don t want to overdo the hero worshipping. we need to engage with them as their actual experience and saying you are a hero. in some ways it is great but in