trey: let me ask you a practical question. being a cop is a difficult job every day. you will be cross-examined by defense attorney it is a hard job. why in the world would police risk their lives or risk being sued to make arrests or investigate cases, that are never going to be prosecuted in. police are out there protecting the public. doing what they were hired to do. the police department throughout country are doing their jobs, politicians, and district attorneys are not doing theirs, traditionally, always. district attorneys and police department worked together. now you see a trend of that not happening it is very troublesome for the safety of the people of this country. trey: you know, paul, i was a prosecutor for almost two
internet usage. it could be watching what a russian soldier is putting on facebook, but north korea does not have a internet, they remain a frightening and something of a black box to the united states government. trey: congressman you mentioned, you are correct, presidents from both parties tried to solve the riddle of north korea. let me ask you a hypothetical. if you were president, and you may be one day, if you were president, is there an approach that we have not yet taken that might work? i don t think so, trey. we re dealing with a very unusual place. you look in the world there are not a lot of places like north korea. you had a family that has ruled country almost the way a mob boss rules the mafia for three generations. they have at times cozied up
i had not been born when that speech was given, tim scott was not born. kamala harris and jeffrey, barack obama was two years old, i read or listen to that speech, i can not imagine living in a country where that speech was necessary. a country where what he depicted existed. it did. whether i was here for it or not. as we know dr. king was assassinated on a motel balcony in memphis, tennessee less than 5 years after he gave the speech, killed before he reached age of 40, he would be 93 had he not been felled by an assassin s bullet. i wonder what he would say about the country we have become. the process is undeniable
but the pain lingers, pain, progress, and potential, is hard to how to aportion those in our own lives, and in the life of our nation, just before dr. king was killed he said something else worth remembering, he said like anybody, i would like to live a long life. but i m not concerned about that now, i just want to do god s will, i ve seen the promised land, i may not get there with you, but i ve sign it dr. king a dream cost him his life, if you have a dream that costs you our life, his dream seems worthy. a country where the character of your life means more than the color of your skin. a country where people can join hands and celebrate their freedom and their equality both in the eyes of the law and in the eyes of god, i wonder
jim: tonight monday. nation will honor life and legacy of martin luther king jr., he was born january 15, 1929, he has been gone for over 50 years, what he did, wrote, stood for and said is not gone it lives, 5 years before dr. king was killed he delivered a speech. most speeches don t impact us for long, every now and 15 and then we hear one, and stays with us. rarely there is a speech that changes us, strong forms us, alters the path of a nation, dr. king did that when he shared his dream for the country. dreams are often borne from adversity, and heartache and