we need a firm international response in order to avert that chemical attack take place in the future. it would send a very, i would say dangerous signal to dictators all over the world if we stand idle by and don t react. many lawmakers, in fact, a lot of people want more details about the evidence of this chemical weapons attack, in particular, who carried it out. that s also what the president plans to do in syria. one of those people wanting answers is our guest. she was at that classified briefing yesterday to congresswoman, thank you for joining us. 80 members of congress came
and actually a very interesting study that showed people who rode the wave and were steady in the long run made more than those who panicked. don t react. sit tight. patience, patience. stocks in asia is also lower but the drop is not nearly as dramatic as it was on wall street. but january georgia pan s economic worries go far beyond the stock market. akiko fujita with the story. good morning. reporter: it looks like we finally sue the end of the slight yesterday. but today, we saw modest gains wiped out as asian markets fell. the nikkei ended the day .6% down much like hong kong hang seng. the shanghai composite index ended in positive territory so some good news. the latest drop came on the heels of the 5000-point loss on wall street but the selloff sparked by the news of credit rating downgrade in france. that s the driving force in wall street and it wasn t any different in asia where worried investors trade e f bank share and those of exporters. in tokyo, we saw carmakers
new mexico governor bill richardson back from the private peace mission to pyongyang spoke to fox news. north koreans always put out a war-like rhetoric to get everybody genned up. it s common for them. last time they put out the rhetoric and they didn t react militarily. few think a nuclear war is possible. one thing about the north koreans, though, they never attack at a time of high tension because they know we re prepared. governor richard sond said he found it to be different from the previous visits. there was something in military that was more pragmatic. they were ready to listen more. they listened when i said don t react militarily. do something about allow iing
exactly what s going on here, and ha is a deeply offensive term to women. can i interject. have you chastised your chairman, pete wilson who called the congress whores to the public sector unions. you know better than that, jerry. that s a completely different thing. the fact that you are defending your campaign the fact you re defending your campaign for a slur and a personal attack on me, i think it s not befitting of california and the office you re running for. you know, in all of these debates, they always caution the audience don t react. but they couldn t help themselves there. in connecticut, willie, it happened over and over again. the audience was booing and hissing and interrupting the moderator. she was a referee in the ring between linda blurichard blumenl
said she wouldn t be beholding to anybody. when you watch these debates f-you didn t have poll you see the aggressor and you realize that s the candidate and meg whitman was the aggressor. i have to go across the country. monday night is normally monday night raw but connecticut senate last night. where did they hold this debate init was wild. tell us about it. reporter: people who love politics, this one is worth watching online because everything from atmosphere to content was uproarous. the moderators at these debates tell the audience please don t react. here they were hissing and booing. moderator had to tell the people to be quiet. dick blumenthal was hitting her for her empire, the wrestling empire with a lot of criticism and she made it a matter of