instructions or go rogue? neither. i am terrible at this. i can t do it. i am useless. i have i had pa people to uh assemble ikea current for me in the past. where do you find them to do that? in ikea. do they come to your home? they did. male or female? i don t remember. i think it was when we met. joanne, what do you think? have you assembled furniture yourself? i have and it is like a big adventure and i like to pretend i am on this ole house. i grew up watching it and i feel so much pride in doing it. if a man would rather do it and do it in half the time, go for it. i am not saying i am bril yept, but there could be a certain enjoyment that you get out of it.
mr. clarridge has daily not weekly briefings that mr. carson receives on military matters from former and state department officials he is coming to the long career. mr. clarridge s input is appreciated but not top advisors for the new york times to take advantage an elderly gentleman and use them as foil in their story is an affront to good journalistic practices. robert, i don t think we have heard the end of this. i have spoke to barry bennett carson s campaign manager. he said carson is trying to read up on foreign affairs. he just had lunch in new york city with henry kissinger the former secretary of state you see0h carson s charm early on political amateur someone who has never been in politics before in politics today in 2015 if you don t have a professional operation around you, people like this advisor, go rogue and they cause problems. quicklied in the wake of paris, does it cause. is he a brilliant man. if you read the article is he not ready to be commander and chi
the pope go rogue and try to reach out to the people in the crowd? well, he may, but the good thing is that even the unplanned events are actually planned. that means that the secret service, and all of the police officers near him, they know that he may do this, and so they are aware, and alert, and so if he does stop the veehicle, they can quickly mobilize to be looking around to see who is nearby, who is reaching in, and what do they have in their hands, and the secret service, and i was walking in central park with a former agent and i said, how do you secure the buildings and the rooftops, and he said that they have had teams going in the buildings to see who has access to the roofs, and do the windows open in or out, and if somebody opens a win e doeshgs they will know that, and in philadelphia for example, people are being told not to open their windows, and to make sure they are not on the balconies and warnings going out, because there are so many events with tense of thousand
from florida. so the administration says they ve got limited resources. they can t round up and deport everyone who is here. they directed i.c.e. agents and others to say you only prosecute and turn in this group, you let this group go. they say it is prosecutorial discretion and that the executive has the power to do that. how would you overcome that argument? well, again, we live in a country where we have a separation of powers. the president has said time and time again he would not subvert the rule of law and he s done just that. we all cherish our heritage. we cherish our immigrants. we cherish the identity that we have through immigration. but we are also a nation of laws and that s what we have to focus on. we can nots have a president go rogue, which is what he s done and totally ignore congressional
program or was not fully informed as to its nature. and also the president relied on the memorandum advice and interpretation by his advisers, including secretaries and the cia director. but of course what the senate report also indicates is that all these briefings may have been undercut, or flawed, because the individuals reporting to the president did not themselves have an accurate understanding of what the program entailed. all right, albert mora, we re going to have to leave it there, but obviously there s a lot more questions on this and we ll be watching and following up with a lot on this particular issue. very, very dark day in america. alberto mora, thank you for your time tonight. thank you. joining me now is nbc news chief foreign correspondent richard engel. thank you for being here, richard. my pleasure. how are you? good. richard, did the cia go rogue,