recovery. he also wrote a book about the earhardt disappearance. good morning, sir. good morning. it seems kind of far fetched to compare the two flights. earhardt s plane went down in the 30s. we have much, much better technology. are there parallels? someone once said that history doesn t repeat itself but it rhymes. nothing vanishes without a trace. we have been working on the earhardt ministry and we for 25 years, many traces, many clues. the parallels to flight 370 just keep coming. you have a flight that was originally thought to have gone down at sea and then a search for wreckage didn t come up with anything and now there are electronic communications from the plane that came in after the time of loss, which made people think that maybe it continued flying and was on land.
be different. we did grow up in tough times, but, you know, i think we learned from our past and that s one thing that my generation, i think, will do is to learn you know, to make sure that history doesn t repeat itself as far as the war in iraq, that was something that i grew up with. it s something that i remember like it was yesterday. and to wrap your mind around the idea of things like that as a young age is very tough, but i think that going forward, my generation will be, you know, the leaders of tomorrow and will make sure that we understand the things that have happened in the past and make sure they don t happen again. well, whether your generation likes it or not, you have to, because we re all dropping the ball these days it seems. jeremy anderson, congratulations. we re going to be watching thank you, chuck. the youngest member of the mississippi legislature in its history. the session begins january 7th. keep us up to date on what
lot from constituents. where is the pressure going to come from that would actually force a deal here? well, it s a great question. you know, mark twain said history doesn t repeat itself but it rhymes. you see a lot of the themes and a lot of self-delusion in this republican rum p, that you saw in the house republicans back in 1995 and 1996. they were sure then that government was so unpopular that the public would cheer the idea it was shut down. i don t think they are quite as expecting that as they are thinking that the political market has almost priced their craziness into it. they are used to the dysfunction of government and used to the hyper partisanship and polarization. so they think they can sort of live with the cost. i think that it s not so much the tea party hopefuls and
all over the countries. and it makes the targeting problem, the technical targeting problem much more difficult. so you can t do it at 24, maybe it s now going to take 48. maybe it s going to take 72 hours. initially it was going to be a strike and restrike. now maybe it s a restrike to the restrike. and then it goes on and on and on, heather. pretty soon, we re going to find ourselves either in a campaign that comes up short and subjectives or a campaign that s extended in order to achieve the on theives. we continue to hear from the administration. this is not iraq. this is not afghanistan, this is not libya. how do they know that? how can they say that not knowing what will happen once we have the initial strike? well, of course, they re right. history doesn t repeat itself and no would wars are the same. and making analogies like that are very dangerous for a couple of reasons. first of all, the syrian army is not the libyan army, it s
homosexuals becomes very negative. when i saw your book, i was, like, what is this book about? we were both remarking on the fact that 1953, 2013, one senator decides he s got to commit suicide because he has an accusation that his son is gay. that is a remarkable change in 0 years. well, it is a remarkable change. though mark twain said history doesn t repeat itself but it does rhyme. we still are confronted today with those situations in politics where politicians choose to demonize entire groups of people. today it s the muslims. there has been great progress in gay rights. it could have been resolved decades ago.