mccain s campaign in 2008. i just got off the plane, he laid off the staff and focused on new hampshire and wasn t doing great in the polls. things change in all of these races. you know, it s great to folks on the horse race because that s an easy thing for people to focus on pt at the end of the day, politics is like the world, it s like life, things change and michael bloomberg is a very, very intelligent and data driven individual i m sure whatever decision he s looking at, he s making it in clear-eyed way. ed: and same for john kerry and all of a sudden he was the iowa democratic nominee. and most of those folks, i m still paying attention and listening and i think that optimism will kind of win the day at the end of the day. there s a lot of negativity in the democratic primary like the country is terrible, all of that stuff. i don t believe that. ed: got to go congressman, but you re making an important point we should never forget. let the voters actually weigh in
a massive group of people who would have been gathered. people fly to germany for the christmas markets, it s absolutely one of the traditions and if it was some sort of attack on that, it s an attack on german culture absolutely because they really represent one of the key attractions really, certainly to berlin at this time of year. it s a great exciting time and it s very cold and people go into the markets and drink warm red wine, it s muled wine and the idea that any sort of incident would happen there would be frightening to many germans and be something they could relate to. we have to wait to see what caused this. you ll remember, brooke, when we first started reporting on pt nice attack, everyone there assumed that this was an out of control truck going through the promenade there and that could still be the case there. we have an incident earlier this year where a bus drove into a crowd and the driver had a heart attack.
children and youth is incredibly important. this is the largest humanitarian crisis in our entire generation. you laid out numbers. let me layout more. 10,000 children have lost their lives. we have about a million children inside syria in hard to access areas. and over 3 million are out of school and have been out of school for about three years. so if we look at that generation of people, those are going to be the future leaders of a prosperous and stable syria. this calls upon the conscience of all of us as the secretary recently said, which means we all have to do more. the u.s. government is doing what it can to focus on pt needs of this important generation so that they don t lose their entire childhoods and young adulthoods to conflict. you just got back from meeting with syrian refugees in jordan. tell us what the regional impact is. if you look at the country like lebanon and jordan and turkey. in lebanon, for example, they ve
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