immigration plan has been working. and the pentagon is telling us tonight that using active duty troops instead of the national guard will not affect readiness. i think we ll see these troops arrive as early as may 10th. pete: that s despite recent claims the border is secure. you said yesterday when it comes to illegal migration, have you seen it come down by more than 90%. where did that number come from? i was speaking. peter: cbp says the answer 156,000 people morphos call year so far. i will answer you if the dramatics come down a little bit. if the dramatics. peter: what s dramatic about asking a question about. okay. i m going to answer. i was speaking to the parolee program. peter: pentagon says troops will be armed for self-defense not law enforcement. laying out their mission like. this fill critical capability gaps. ground based detection and monitoring. data entry. and warehouse support. as the pentagon preps for a migrant surge, lawmakers are
A new book. Things that matter is not a confessional memoir or scandalous kissandtell. Its a collection of newspaper and magazine pieces from the pulitzer prizewinning columnist. Or maybe its more than that. Are you decoding my book . I am decoding it right now. Like its entirely about me. [ laughs ] but its all written in hieroglyphics. Well, its not quite as impenetrable as hieroglyphics. Lets start with part one of your book, and it is titled personal. And in there, the first column is really an incredibly moving piece about your brother. Marcel krauthammer died of cancer. He was 59. Charles writes this about his older brother. He taught me most everything i ever learned about every sport i ever played. He taught me how to throw a football, hit a backhand, grip a nine iron, field a grounder, dock a sailboat in the tailing wind. And how we played. It was paradise. Tell me about that. It was a paradisiacal childhood. My brother and i were inseparable. He was four years older, which is
own journeys in higher education. tonight we re honored to announce the recipients of this year s dr. charles krauthammer memorial scholarship. education was always important to dr. charles krauthammer. why did you choose psychiatry. i was looking for something halfway that s been the reality of medicine and the elegance, if you like, of philosophy. so psychiatry was the obvious thing. bret: charles graduated at the top of his class at harvard. he decided to change paths and become a journalist which ultimately brought him to washington and eventually to special report. just remember when you go to the candidate casino you go there not to make friends but to make money. bret: we treasured every moment, especially his commentary which cut through the noise and still remains relevant today. the chinese, when they get upset, can do things like take over an island here or there or tear up an agreement. joe biden unleashed. it s a pity he will be gone
he goes to harvard middle medicl school. he really was straddling those two disciplines. look what he chooses in his medical specialty. i studied politics and philosophy before. and i had this feeling this is too abstract. i should be doing something serious with my life, you know, a kind of real job in the real world with real facts. not ohio state ohio hoyty toyot. not of this airy fairy stuff. get real with life. i decided to go to medical school. but i wanted to do something that i thought would be sophisticated and intellectual and in some ways abstract. i was looking for something halfway between the reality of medicine and the elegance, if you like, of philosophy. so psychiatry was the obvious thing. i was lucky because it was probably the easiest branch of medicine for me to do once i was hurt.
he goes to harvard middle medicl school. he really was straddling those two disciplines. look what he chooses in his medical specialty. i studied politics and philosophy before. and i had this feeling this is too abstract. i should be doing something serious with my life, you know, a kind of real job in the real world with real facts. not ohio state ohio hoyty toyot. not of this airy fairy stuff. get real with life. i decided to go to medical school. but i wanted to do something that i thought would be sophisticated and intellectual and in some ways abstract. i was looking for something halfway between the reality of medicine and the elegance, if you like, of philosophy. so psychiatry was the obvious thing. i was lucky because it was probably the easiest branch of medicine for me to do once i was hurt.