Get together with some smart people could break down the big story today, were asking if the Migrant Crisis continues to grow ten President Bidens trip to the border help him flip the script on the issue. Many voters say, is their biggest concern that will Super Tuesday coming up and donald trump expected to win big again, can he afford to ignore the chunk of voters nikki haley is taking . And shes back. Monica lewinsky is new look and mission which has a lot of heads turning. The panel is here and ready to go. So sit back, relax, and lets talk about up first the number one issue for voters, not immigration. A problem that took center stage this week when both President Biden and donald trump headed to the southern border hoping to convince voters the Migrant Crisis is the other guys fault. Air force one, and trump force one, setting up a texas showdown. As the two president s faced off over who can fix the border, this is a joe biden invasion. This is a biden invasion over the past th
greg: speaking of banks, did you hear what s going down at goldman sachs. the perks that you used to enjoy your job is disappearing faster than whoopi goldberg s jewish fan base. according to the new york post, they re taking away the free coffee perks for the goldman sachs employees, i know, stop the presses, or, at least, the french presses. i know. that s why i sit down here and you re in the audience. so, now those bankers will have to pay for it like the rest of us, just like i do for those massages. bill hemmer has such strong hands. sadly, as the new york post reports, goldman sachs employees return to work on tuesday to find out that they would have to pay for the crappy coffee. that s the post s words, not mine. i m guessing it s starbuck which i happen to like. you know what i say? i like my coffee the tway i like my joy reid black and really bitter. to quote one worker, they were greeted by a sign and a woman yelling at them the coffee was no longer complem
there isn t a world leader that she didn t meet or hold court with so to speak. and each and every single one of them, from presidents to despot to dictators, all respecting. i m taken by as max said the lockstep march that the bearers, security and the royals, the left right, left right. it is very difficult to do. but of course, the princes and the princesses, they ve been in military service or they re been aware. speaking of. let s just listen for a moment . [ sound of gunfire ] so made ever more audible, which really personifies the gravity of what is going on, the cobblestone streets so you hear the clap, clan, clap of the hooves of the horses and also of the soldiers and the family marching in the step there. but also this is the first time throughout the days that we have been covering this that they are behind. they are a few minutes behind because they have to go slowly on these streets. not only because of the crowds but because of the cobblestone as well.
that through these ceremonies, these processes. and you see just how well it is done. it has been well rehearsed, practiced and planned. she was an old lady who they knew would dywon day and while nobody wanted that day to arrive, they have been planning what to do for potentially decades. that means that when it comes down to it, all of the people you are seeing on screen now have practiced and practiced and practiced their roles. that includes, of course, her son, king charles, who now while he is grieving in the depths of his grief for his mother s death is taking on the enormous burden she used to have being a monarch. while people think about that in fairytales as a massive privilege and life of glamour, it is also an extremely difficult job and the burden of responsibility on him is now enormous. something that boris johnson mentioned when he spoke in the house of commons in tribute to queen elizabeth about the enormous burden she undertook at such an early age. he is u
known as the royal mile. of course we will have that service for you when it begins. just moments ago, the coffin of queen elizabeth ii arrived in the heart of the historic old town of edinburgh known as, i said, the royal mile. king charles iii and princess anne, princes edward and andrew walk behind the coffin, the monarch s official residence in scotland to the cathedral. before he left for edinburgh, the king addressed parliament for the first time as sovereign in westminster hall, the same place where his mother will lie in state this week. he said parliament is the living and breathing instrument of our democracy. what we are seeing today is a mixture of the political, the constitutional, and, as you see her children behind her coffin, the deeply personal lawmakers singing the national anthem, god save the king, for the first time. we saw a bit of emotion from the king there. prince harry released a deeply personal statement, paying tribute to his grandmother saying, gr