contributions at the urban wild land interface where we re seeing the fires. and i think that it is important that the state and policymakers start moving toward solutions that can address both housing, transportation and climate change. and you say that they drive a dozen miles, and it doesn t sound like a lot, but you when it takes two hours to go four miles, that is quite a distance. thank you guys very much. i hope that you will talk to us more about climate change. not just in california. next up, on the basis of sex, why the fate of amending the constitution to ban sex is in the hands of the legislation chur. x is in the hands of the legislation chur the clock is ticking on irreversible joint damage. ongoing pain and stiffness are signs of joint erosion. humira can help stop the clock.
being emitted by the united states and other countries. while we re doing that we re going to have to make our communities more resilient. we re going to have to deal with the problem that many of our communities have brushed in. the forests have been allowed to have too much growth and overgrowth. we need to properly manage not just the forest but also the urban wild land interface. and when we rebuild, whether it s one home or 13,000 homes that sounds look what we ve heard from some republicans and president trump what you re talking about. well, there s two different things here. the president is right that the forests need to be better managed. it s not that they ve been moose mana mismanaged, it s that we believe that smokey the bear was correct, that there shouldn t be fire in the forests, they should be left alone. they shouldn t be left alone. paradise was not a national
what is the effect maybe symbolically, psychologically, to the islamic state, to isis? because we know short after we saw this video coming out, it was essentially to kind of beef up the morale of isis fighters as well. is that what we are needing to see as far as more than just air strikes and more than just terrorist ten terrorists killed? great question. there s no doubt that the fusion between what s called the air/land interface, the ability of u.s. advisors who are some of them that went in last summer into iraq, the ability to prosecute air strikes and work with ground forces in ramadi, the sunni militia, in sinjar working with the pkk, working with the ypg and peshmerga, that is working very well. but we have to take a step back and look at governance. when we look at ramadi, where does ramadi go from here? how do you govern ramadi in a way that gives fair representation. and where will the militants
i don t have experience with those. i was jumping prior to the time that those were even available, and there have been tremendous developments in safety equipment since the time that i was an active smoke jumper back in the 1950s. bill: you say it s critically important you have to get an aggressive initial attack. what does that mean? how does it apply to these guys? an aggressive initial attack is to try to hit the fire while it s small, and - even an that is dependent on a good dispatch system. if they are hesitant to get on the fire right away, and particularly a fire that has the potential for being in an urban wild land interface, then those