it s what we do every night keeping them honest. as always, we re not taking political sides here. we re trying to figure out what is true and what is not. we begin tonight with a romney ad. in 1996, president clinton and a bipartisan congress helped end welfare as we know it, by requiring work for welfare. on july 12th, president obama quietly announced a plan to gut welfare reform by dropping work requirements. under obama s plan, you wouldn t have to work and wouldn t have to train for a job. they just send you your welfare check. welfare to work goes back to being plain old welfare. you ll hear from newt gingrich who joins us to defend that ad but also makes a stunning admission whether that ad he s defending is also speaking the facts. also mitt romney on the claims made in that ad. he removed the requirement of work from welfare. it is wrong to make any change that would make america more of a nation of government depend denicy. we must restore and i will restore
back to being plain old welfare. newt gingrich defends that ad but makes an admission whether that ad is strictly speaking true to the facts. but first, i want to show you how mitt romney is campaign on the claims knead that very ad. 7 with a careful executive action, he removed the requirement for work from welfare. it is wrong to make any change that would make america more of a nation of government dependcy. we nus restore, and i will restore work into welfare. now, listening to that, you would think the white house with the sweep of the pen somehow managed to undo all of your elected representatives, democrats and republicans accomplished on welfare reform. you get the impression the obama administration wants an america where hardworking americans pay taxes and lazy onescy sit around collecting welfare. and in case you missed the implications, newt gingrich spelled it out. i think on the hard left there s an unending desire to create a dependent america. not just
elected president. bono has been making great music since this kind of hair was fashionable the first time. this is u2 s first big hit before beautiful day and i still haven t found what i m looking for. a bit about your eyes make a circle. i don t know what that means in english, but it transitions into a lot of record sales and a fair amount of money. today the middle-aged bono with the good works for humanity and the nice family and the endless hits and the large-sized fortune, he became incredibly fantastically rich, quite possibly the richest musician in the world. passing paul mccartney. it s not as a reward for philanthropy and weirdly not because of his music. it s because of this. facebook went public today. the company sold stock for the first time. its initial public offering, its ipo, the term of art or acronym of art. in an instant facebook became a $100 billion company.
the obama administration and b.p. both claim they are doing everything they can to get gulf coast residents the money into the relief they need but some of those residents say they re getting the run around and have received absolutely nothing. sherry fortlan attended a meeting regarding the issue. she joins us right now and extremely frustrated. what was it like? did you have a chance to speak and get your needs satisfied? i did have a chance to speak but nothing was really satisfied except i got to vent a little bit. other than that, nothing has been done. i called b.p. they said to call b.p. and they said set $20 million aside for us. so far, i talked to b.p. and supposed to be giving us a gesture. they haven t done that. i ve left 10 messages and i talked to the governor and his office has called. the work force commission has called, social services for louisiana has called and state senator has called and i still
there is always tomorrow. kennedy, did you have been on your to-do list? kennedy: that s a fine question. i was feel like there is a looming stuff in the closet that needs to be organized but it is so daunting. when you live in new york city, you can t have a lot of stuff. anything you have, you jam into a closet. the thought of pulling that out and making something of it is so overwhelming. i ve been meaning to do that for about three years. jesse: dana has vast walk-in closets. greg: for her, every closet is a walk-in closet. dana: i can fit a lot of closing there. juan: i wanted to go overseas. i haven t taken a trip overseas this year, and i wanted to go to italy. i ve never been to italy. my wife said no. jesse: you better be careful. trump might not let you back in the country. juan: good point. jesse: extreme vetting. juan: i think she has some of greg s problem. she is sick of airports and