joey. when we got to the top and he hugged me, i could feel his heartbeating through his suit. you cannot change destiny but you can change something terrible into something positive for many families. out of the fire, pull out life.
hey, everybody. it s john and we hit a bump on the campaign trail. it was on friday. i wasn t feeling well, so i decided i need to get checked out i made you get checked out. i was right as always. so, she followed up with the back story. his wife that is i told john he needed to get some rest now. there were a couple more things we want to let you know. john had a stroke. that was caused by a clot from his heartbeating in an irregular rhythm for too long. fortunately the amazing doctors here were able to completely clear the clot and entirely reverse the stroke. they also got his heart under control. the good news is, he s feeling much better and the doctors say he s well on his way to a full recovery. i guess when your heart is that big and carries so much love for his state, sometimes it asks for a rest. they re keeping him here for now
to talk about good news because there s always good news somewhere. and that one absolutely rules. today, he comes to us from california where a firefighter who dedicated his life to helping others, he s doing the same thing in death. perry choi died of a stroke just before he turned 47. but he donated his heart to another man a guy named jim donovan on sunday. choi s widow met donovan for the first time and she got the chance to listen to her husband s heartbeating in another man s chest. afterwards she said that she felt like they were all a family. that s an extraordinary story. it wraps us up for this hour and it restores some faith in humanity. at the end of the day, we ve all got to try to be a little bit nicer to one another. doesn t mean we re not going to call one another out for bad behavior, but at the end of the day, could we just be a little nice center i ll see you again at 11:00 a.m. where i promise i ll be nice to my partner and
vietnam war. this weekend, msnbc is presenting a special documentary, the most dangerous man in a america, a real-life thriller about daniel elsberg, the man who leaked the classified documents and changed history. i began xeroxing the mcnamara study in the fall of 1969. at the end of the day working at rand, i would put several volumes into my brief case to take with me. walking past the security guards, i could feel my heartbeating. i couldn t help thinking about the dozen or so secrecy agreements i had signed over the course of my career in government. the task seemed endless. i often worked through the night. early in the morning, i returned the papers to my safe at rand and headed home.
walking past the security guards, i could feel my heartbeating. i couldn t help thinking about the dozen or so secrecy agreements signed over the course of my career in government. the task seemed endless. i often worked through the night. early in the morning, i returned the papers to my safe at rand and headed home. i get back to my house on a little narrow beach in malibu. i loved to body surf, and i would go in every morning before i went to bed, and i remember at some point during this being in the waves in the sunlight and looking back at the hills of malibu and thinking, how can i be doing this? how can i be giving all this up? i was 13 at the time he said there was a secret history of the vietnam war he had been