he wrote, given the horrific record of human suffering, to be a moral disgrace to embrace socialism just win elections as some suggest. giancarlo joined us now. we are happy to have him. giancarlo, you heard the conversation, matt sharp and victor davis hanson think, warning, history tells us, like a flashing warning sign, do not go down this path. they were embracing democratic socialism. i don t care what the are tryinh to call it but they are embracing it. your reaction? socialists love poor people so much that they duplicate them by the millions. that s a philosophy of failure and it s a moral disgrace, like i said in my op-ed. what has happened in countries like cuba and countries like venezuela, our human disasters. thousands and thousands of cubans have died at sea trying to flee socialism, trying to get up united states of america. you have venezuelans, 2 million have left their country in the last three years alone.yo what you are seeing is a mass exodus away from socialis
insurance, essentially? i think the fire rages in the insurance markets for months to come in that there will be disasters, real human disasters, if they do not get to 50. that s why i think they have to get to 50 because they will not be able to connect. and if you repeal and not replace, the more confusion you ll get in the insurance markets. i kind of disagree, i think there will be more disasters in the insurance market. the republican party has had its hands around the throat of the affordable care act for seven years, it hasn t died, but it s not doing too well now. i think they ll have to do something. i smell a new version of the doc fix. something like that, chuck. there s been so much uncertainty, basically the only supporters outside this bill have been a handful of health insurers who say, look, this bill will at least stabilize our individual market. i do think we re at the point where the uncertainty is so great, they ll be forced to do that. later in the broa
what s written on the paper would be the same. it wouldn t get through the house. this is the problem. they would have to go call nancy pelosi and ask for her help, but that s it goes back to our original point. it isn t the type of bill anybody is going to sign onto. if this does fail, and the republicans can t do this alone, what does the next month look like on health care? is it a small deal of just sort of propping up the insurance markets and hhs says, okay, we ll give you some risk insurance, essentially? i think the fire rages in the insurance markets for months to come in that there will be disasters, real human disasters, if they do not get to 50. that s why i think they have to get to 50 because they will not be able to connect. and if you repeal and not replace, the more confusion you ll get in the insurance markets. i kind of disagree, i think there will be more disasters in the insurance market.
we ll give you some risk insurance essentially. the fire rages in the insurance market for months sometimes and there will be disasters and real human disasters. that s why they do have to get to 50. i think there will be initial disasters of the insurance market. the republican party it is not doing too well now. i do think i smell a new version of the doc s fix. the only supporters outside of this bill have been a handful of health insurance who are saying okay, look this bill will stabilize our individual market, i think we are at the point where uncertainty are so great that we ll pause that.
don t hold the tears back, but let them flow. it s how we were hard wired in order to be able to express and to acknowledge that there is a deep human pain that is going on inside of us. bill: you know, your previous life, you were a governor of arkansas. yes. bill: you had to deal with natural disasters and human disasters and the tragedy that man inflicts upon other men and you had to face those victims or you had to face those who were trying to move on with their own lives. what did you do as the head of that state? i remember the day after the jonesboro shooting in march of 1998, which an 11 and 12-year-old opened fired on their classmates and teachers. it was the most horrific thing i went through as a governorment i spent the next day visiting the survivors in the hospital and then i met with the entire staff of the school. behind closed doors, no press.