the medal of honor at the white house by president obama. and in january of 2011, the former vice president did award a bronze star to army agent chad workman in afghanistan. those discrepancy highlighting biden s history of gaffes making this comparison to president trump saying last december, i m a gaffe machine, but my god, what a wonderful thing compared to a guy who can t tell the truth. president trump has accused biden of being off his game. joe biden has truly lost his fastball. but critics point to the president s own strange relationship with the facts. according to the washington post, he s delivered more than 12,000 false or misleading statements since taking office. and as for that army staff target, chad workman, the soldier who received that blonde star from biden, he tells the post eight years later he still remembers that meeting and that moment saying, quote, he has that look where his eyes can see
amplifying the profile of the shooters which encourages more shooters. we re not showing the manifestos or reprinting them. that s great things. that s not how we did it from the public and the media over the last decade. one of the most striking examples was in 2011. the most sophisticated i.e.d. happened in january of 2011. the assumption was it was an international terrorist bringing it to the united states. it was not. it was a former u.s. military soldier. it was a martin luther king parade in spokane, washington. most of the coverage during that time period was about a thwarted plot in texas that was al qaeda inspired. when you look at how we ve treated this over the last decade, all the procedures, everything we push, whether it s even during the obama administration, it was disproportionately po focussed on al qaeda and the islamic
over the last decade. it was always splashed across the screen what the person looked like. where they came from. they didn t have to execute the attack and we were talking about it. think about the attacks this week. i think we ve handled it much better. we re not blowing up an amplifying the profile of the shooters which encourages more shooters. we re not showing the manifestos or reprinting them. that s great things. that s not how we did it from the public and the media over the last decade. one of the most striking examples was in 2011. the most sophisticated i.e.d. seen from a terrorist attack. happened in january of 2011. the assumption was it was an international terrorist bringing it to the united states. it was not. it was a former u.s. military soldier. it was a martin luther king parade in spokane, washington. most of the coverage during that time period was about a thwarted plot in texas that was al qaeda inspired. when you look at how we ve treated this over the last dec
the screen what the person looked like. they didn t have to execute the attack and we were talking about it. think about the attacks this week. i think we ve handled it much better. we re not blowing up an amplifying the profile of the shooters which encourages more shooters. we re not showing the manifestos or reprinting them. that s great things. that s not how we did it from the public and the media over the last decade. one of the most striking examples was in 2011. the most sophisticated i.e.d. happened in january of 2011. the assumption was it was an international terrorist bringing it to the united states. it was not. it was a former u.s. military soldier. it was a martin luther king parade in spokane, washington. most of the coverage during that time period was about a thwarted plot in texas that was al qaeda inspired. when you look at how we ve treated this over the last decade, all the procedures, everything we push, whether it s even during the obama
corruption which is rife throughout this part of the world. therefore, until those problems are addressed, you will always have those who go to the extreme, to the most fanatical solutions that might be out there and that s what isis represents. there are, for instance, young egyptians who took part in the revolution there in january of 2011, had hopes in that resolution, became disillusioned and joined isis and moved to syria or iraq. so unless that situation is changed, i m afraid that we may not be far from the emergence of isis 2.0. fredricka. and now what s next if isis is gone in that stronghold of syria? reporter: well certainly in the short term the concern is sleeper cells, isis sleeper cells, which are active in many