i think there might be an opening for a democrat who doesn t sound like a traditional democrat. but until we get the axis right and figure it out, we have this sort of back and forth i think. just on the democratic side, i think you have a slightly different dynamic which is that obviously hillary clinton lost, so now there is an enormous amount of pressure that say she lost because she was too close to the center. i think the momentum at the moment with the democratic party is torn. do you think she lost because she was too i m not saying, i don t. i understand that there are really rich guys that fund democratic candidates and rich women that fund democratic candidates running for president that think that hillary s problem was she was too cent ricentrist do you take them seriously?
admiral, right now north korea has nuclear weapons including perhaps a rudimentary hydrogen bomb and pretty sophisticated missiles. is there any prospect that it will change? in other words, will they continue to be a nuclear power, and is that something that the united states is going to have to accept whether we like it or not? yeah. gene, in the end, this is the gut question in the negotiations. a good way to think of this is kind of like two streams of threat that are closing. one is the delivery vehicle, hardening miniaturizing the missile side of this thing, and the other is the nuclear weapon, the hydrogen bomb. hasn t been tested open area. it s like in ghost busters, you don t want the streams to cross, and they are going to cross sometime in the next 12 months, 18 months. this program has accelerated enormously. our intelligence community missed that. that s the gut question, can we live with it? there s still a moment to stop