surveillance particles we can monitor and do the things we need to be doing. kat: you have to aaron: the americans and brits are experts at investigating crime. the responders show up. everybody praises the responder responders. they re going to get there in 8 minutes. they did a great job. the problem is, profiling afterwards, fingerprinting, investigating. i don t care if these guys were connected to a larger network. the profile of a would-be with no connection to isis with a knife on a bridge or in a car is going to do the same amount of damage by someone connected to isis. eric: within minutes of the attack, forget after they are dead, within minutes, they have 12 people arrested. what does that tell you? they knew. eboni: you re right, and that s my frustration. all of these attacks,
more about how were going to do things. all we hear is ban, ban, ban. mike: i probably found this to be the funniest comment of the week. if you want to know how disingenuous putin is in the nature of this guy, former kgb officer. he had the gall to say when he sat next to general flynn at the dinner that was held in moscow, he had no idea who mike flynn was very didn t occur to him. he had no idea and found out afterwards. the idea that the press is paying attention to what putin says is absurd. if they are going to act in their own best interest. that s what russia does. putin has always regretted the fall of the soviet union. he believes it is the greatest catastrophe of the 20th century. at the same time, doesn t mean there is collusion. that is smoke that s going nowhere. eboni: well said. programming note, you don t want to miss the show on thursday.
say thank you to to great, let s call you bad as heck dudes. a very special terror-related day. good to have you. eboni: moments like this, i ve been on sat with mike several times, learned so much. thank you. i know you ve got ideas and you have accompanied the does this type of stuff. if there is one thing that every american wants to make this less of an issue, what would you have them do? mike: do we have four more hours in the show? i ve been watching this a long time and dealing with it a long time. i am cynical i don t think it s going to go away on our lifetimes. you have to get busy living. you don t change your lifestyle, your pattern. you ve got to stay out there but i think if there s one thing. we need to find a way to begin to talk to each other again.
training, finances, communication, legal support. where is a good, intrepid journalist? find out who was at the bottom of these protests. eboni: i take in a lot of issues with certain things from president trump but it s important that he and his supporters be able to say their piece, come together, and have that moment of speech and what they feel like is important. by shutting that down, it breeds us becoming a nation that so many people say their afraid of us becoming that they don t want us to become. if were going to be truly tolerant and be a nation of values for the racist ideologies are diverse, we should not only tolerate. we have to embrace and celebrat celebrate. mike: and put a bunch of undercover cops in there. eboni: when you start
eric: this city, shouldn t law enforcement or fbi, intel be able to listen into mosques? kat: we were talking about changing laws, the standard for proof and probable cause. for the sake of terrorism but when you do something for the sake of terrorism in this country, often it gets expanded and that gets used for other cases and we don t want to let isis win in a sense by destroying our way of life for ourselves. eboni: when you talk about the reasons why standard of law can be changed, there s no greater reason than public safety. kat: used to apply to drug cases which have nothing to do with public safety. mike: if i can inject a cynical and negative point which is i am listening to this conversation and you are right, i think what you re saying about profiling and adjusting and looking at the loss, i will say also i ve been in the same conversations for what seems like a lifetime now.