dave ogle says the same thing. trump needs to surround himself with the right people. i want to see the cabinet. i think he will be a ceo and sit there and let the cabinet do all the work. that s what i think. and then i want to see who they are going to pick for the supreme court. reporter: filling the supreme court is also near the top of many wish lists. but it isn t long before we re back to the wall. one of the first priorities i would say, secure or borders. i want this to be a country again. build a wall? build a wall, yes? but that is that s to me, that s a rhetorical term. building a wall doesn t mean brick and mortar, okay. you hear that a lot. the wall trump has spoken so much about to many trump voters is not really a wall at all. the wall. what is that? build it, don t build it, it s a real wall, it s not a real wall? i don t know whether a actual physical wall is the thing to do. i think there is probably other ways that he can curb some of it
tentatively he approached and asked berthia a question. what can we do to get over this hump? countless people have stood on this same precipice. more than 1,600 of them jumped. it is easy for the average person to go over that rail. many have fought for decades to take away that easy access, to deter would-be jumpers. but what seemed like a simple idea, a physical barrier to jumping, divided the city. half wanted it. the other half of the folks said don t you dare deface the bridge, don t build it. if you build it people will just go someplace else and jump. but that may not be true. in fact, more than one study of 500 people tried to jump from the golden gate but were restrained found that decades later nearly 90% were still alive or had died of natural causes. other bridges with barriers have reduced or eliminated suicides. apparently suicidal
to. the broad solution is put a price on carbon. we have to price it so that things like solar and wind become more and more competitive and more and more attractive. are you disappointed the president didn t make a decision on on keystone excel? i think every day it doesn t get built is a victory. so ultimately i hope he decides against it, but i rather he delay than say yes. if the options are don t delay, build, my preference is don t build it. if it s between saying yes and delay, i ll take delay. you can see all in with chris hayes here on msnbc. at noon chris and i talk about the growing income divide and why europe offers a better quality of life for its low wage citizens than people have here in the u.s. two supreme court justices of the odds and whether this is
starting a real national debate about how soon can we get out of afghanistan, how soon should we get out of afghanistan. i just you know, i m almost i can t speak about it, i feel so strongly, that this kind of thing goes on albeit on a smaller scale, it went on in iraq and afghanistan. by the billions. by the billions, super billions, and thank heavens to the investigators who got to the bottom of this and exposed it. we have such dedicated public service. we need to know about this, we need to have transparency. these inspector generals who are aggressive, they ll put up the photos about it, and tell you the background about it, they are not shy about putting the stuff out there. i think you re right, these are the kind of guys that ought to get a medal for this.
inspector general, it s fate is that probably it s going to be torn down. after you and i spent 34 million american taxpayer dollars to join it. jim miklaszewski spoke with the special inspector general today. this was designed originally for an army three-star general s headquarters, it was a very large building for that. 64,000 square feet. then we made a decision during the surge not to bring the army down to leather neck, so the marines took over. the marine corps general who ran that area, after he saw the plans, i assume said i don t want it, i don t need it, don t build it. as far as we know, the afghans don t know anything about it, they don t want it it, and they probably couldn t maintain it. if you go inside, it is beautiful. it is state of the art from the air conditioning to the electronics, the computers, beautiful chairs.