continue or as an example why it should not continue? as why it should not continue. did you make that clear to president? absolutely. why did you say you have notes if you don t think you have notes? sir, please. please. i don t. do you ve hey notes or don t? i don t know. neil: larry over whether what is going on resembles anything like what was on the verge of exploding back then. larry, what do you think? boy, that brought back memories. my eyes were glued to the tv set then, a all of our eyes were back in 1973. remember, the key difference is it took 11 months to get to the opening of the senate hearings on watergate, 1973. started in june of 1972. well, some of this just started. yes, benghazi was in september of last year but the other two scandals, including the irs
that is the suspect in the blue t-shirt on the right who was eventually arrested after the victim s death. go ahead, kirsten. yeah. yeah, i think, you know, we don t know what happened. i agree with judy. in the situation before you take a picture, you should rush to help the person, but i m not going to second guess what this person thought. if he thought that what he was doing was going to help alert the conductor, so be it, you know? i don t think that there s any way to know without having been there what the right thing to do would be. jon: one of the most iconic images really that came out of the vietnam war was the picture of a 9-year-old little girl, her name was kim. she had been just out and about when she was, well, napalmed, you know, flaming gasoline attached to her in a mistaken attack by the south vietnamese airport. this took place in vietnam in june of 1972.
people with motor homes, all which includes those with motorcycles on the highway right now. reducing the speed to 45 miles per hour. some of the winds ways you are describing as well, governor, a few years back, you have been a lifelong resident of pennsylvania. many people don t think don t think of pennsylvania is where hurricanes hit. have you ever been through something like this before? absolutely. back in june of 1972. i live here in central pennsylvania and remember four solid days of it created thousands and millions of dollars of damage. it affected the area for a long time. last year, as governor, we had hurricane irene. billions of dollars worth of
intelligence prior to the event, and there were all the warning signs, if there was that kind of an intelligence somebody would have had to override recommendations. now who do you get to override those? that is not some, again it s not some low-level career bureaucrat that is a political appointee either at state department or the white house. bill: why do you mention it in this case? because the similarities are really eerie. the watergate break in was in june of 1972. the mainstream media it. they said break in, nothing do it. nixon was handily reelect ned 1972. then the drip, drip, drip. who were the whistle-blowers? they were within the fbi, seeding it to the washington post. there are a lot of similarities. i can tell you that an administration which is fumbling, this was a 3:00am wake up wall, right?
i don t care where she is. i d be ready to talk to her. does it ever strike you, the irony that you just mentioned a break-in at the democratic national committee. you re talking about electronic that s right. but a break-in nonetheless. that s right. it s a high-tech break-in, just like happened in june of 1972 in may of 1972. it s the same thing. except in this situation, they were able to take lots more documents, nobody was there to check the tape on the door or catch any of the burglars, and it wasn t until after the fact that we actually learned that the burglars were russian. and that there was a plot to take those e-mails and use them to throw the election to donald trump. well putt. matthew, about mr. comey, comey s name is back in this because of mr. mccabe, the former number two at fbi.