no apologies, but we spend over $1.2 trillion in the last five years alone. martha: you are a physician. your wife is also a physician, head of surgery at a facility you will both threaten louisiana. you started a clinic to try to provide more health care for lower income people. personally, how do you feel about where you are right now in this process and having someone accuse you of creating a program where, for example, if a child has a heart condition and then they need surgery over the course of their lives, they are just going to be left out in the cold. i respect that mr. kimmel is passionate about the issue. his child might have died on the date of birth. i understand his concern. i have that concern. as much as he doesn t want to think that, you can look at my life s work, 25 years in a public hospital for the uninsured, working in prison, free clinics, et cetera. my life gives testament to that. because of this bill, there will be to so many more people in
temperamentally suited for corrections work than the ministry. i still see this as my life s work. this is my ministry. it s not just a job. it never has been just a job for me. it s not natural to keep human beings in cages. and it s not natural to be the human being that is keeping somebody else in a cage. and there s something about that unnatural environment that causes the people who are the keepers of the cage to take some psychological steps to make that easier on them to the point to where you don t see them as humans at all. i tried to consciously fight against that tendency. hopefully i modelled that fo some othpeople. it is possible to spend your career in corrections and not treat inmates like dirt and not treat these people like trash, but to have compassion and sympathy and understanding for what the families go through. and families usually go through a lot. hi, we re here to see victoria groth. all right. can i check your id, please?
and i think it s a book to get your head around a lot of things that senator warren is going to be talking about for the rest of her career actually. yeah. i think this is the central you here. it is. this book is really about my life s work, and it s about the stories of whose affected it and it s about how we get in the fight and are effective. my student loan was $2,800 coming out of holy cross, payable at 3%. when you finally got around to it after grad school, after the peace corps, that was doable. thank you so much, senator elizabeth warren from the bay state, massachusetts. the commonwealth. coming up, president trump s readiness to meet with authoritarian rulers like the leaders of north korea and the philippinesetting off alarm bells in d.c. and around the world. critics wonder where his head is right now, but does donald trump have a strategic reason for saying the things he s saying these nice, almost smarmy things about the head of north korea? what s he talkin
over health care itself. here s jimmy kimmel. on friday, april 21st, my wife molly gave birth to a boy, a baby boy. his name is william john kimmel. he appeared to be a normal, healthy baby until about three hours after he was born. they did an echocardiogram and found that billy was born with a heart disease. and on monday morning, the doctor opened his chest and fixed one of the two defects in his heart. and he opened the valve, and the operation was a success. it was the longest three hours of my life [ applause ] you know, before 2014, if you were born with congenital heart disease like my son was, there was a good chance you d never be able to get health insurance because you had a pre-existing condition. if your baby is going to die, and it doesn t haveto,t shouldn t matter how much money you make. i authentic thatthink that s sor you re a republican or democrat or something else, we all agree on that, right? id mean we do
o er the land of the free and the home of the brave inside grand rapids kent county jail, captain randy demery is nearing the end of a 25-year career. he says much of what influenced him came from his old job. this isn t what i went to school for, actually. i have a theology degree and i had a couple churches in south dakota when i first got out of college. kind of got involved in the jail business out there. i figured out i was more temperamentally suited for corrections work than the ministry. i still see this as my life s work.