threw away all the siding. this is the most focused i ve ever had to be on a job in my life. like a stereo, look at that. after the men and women much more coordinated than me finish with the sorting process, the separate materials are compacted and prepared for shipment to the market. then they re reprocessed into new products, but not all materials can be recycled equally. glass goes on to make many things as it s 100% recyclable, reprocessed forever. humble soda can may live in surprising places or another can in which case it could be back on store shelves in 60 days ready for a lifetime of recycling. paper has only 5 to 7 lives but while it s alive, man, is it versatile. and then there s plastic. if it s recyclable at all, really has one other useful life.
to look at? it is. it gives you an idea there is a lot of life down there and a lot of garbage on the seafloor. there s a lot off marine floor. obviously they take it on and make it their own. it s amazing they do. there s also the tremendous challenge of trying to reach these depths and being able to bring to light we have the technology. the problem is that a lot of this technology is funded privately. so that is not really shared with the public. what this expedition is allowing is for people to see in realtime and livetime what s going on down there, what this looks like. when there s loss of life, it s a graveyard. that s also as bittersweet as that is to define that, i know i worked on discovery vr-12 with 42 men on it. it s a very solemn place. it s dark and eerie and yet, what we re seeing is that it isn t such a terribly dark and dank place. it s alive.
coming up ahead on the show it s alive. it s alive. it s alive. in the name of god. i know what it feels like to be god. in the name of god. modern dr. frankenstein wrestles with the monster he, himself, has created and i will explain in just a bit.
i don t see this administration investing a whole lot into iraq. the situation over there is a mess. and we left it that way. and i just don t see a long-term investment in special operations forces in iraq. spencer ackerman from the guardian and former navy s.e.a.l. brandon webb. thank you gentlemen, both. coming up ahead on the show it s alive. it s alive. it s alive. in the name of god. i know it feels like to be fwod. in the name of god. modern dr. frankenstein wrestles with the monster he, himself, has created and i will explain in just a bit. spokesperson: the volkswagen passat is heads above the competition,
ground, push them out of sunni cities or alternatively give the sunnis a reason to push isis out? that s a huge, huge question and one not answered by the white house today. brandon, having been an operator, yourself, in some of these and having seen the way we ve come to rely so heavily on special operations forces, what is your best guess about six months from now are we going to see more or less operators being put into iraq? you know, that s a great question. you know, and it s a tough one to really answer. i don t see this administration investing a whole lot into iraq. the situation over there is a mess. and we left it that way. and i just don t see a long-term investment in special operations forces in iraq. spencer ackerman from the guardian and former navy s.e.a.l. brandon webb. thank you gentlemen, both. coming up ahead on the show it s alive. it s alive. it s alive. in the name of god. i know what it feels like to be god. in the name of god. modern dr. franke