do you ever feel burned out? jesse: no, i don t feel burned out. i sit every day for an hour and host a television show, it is not that stressful of a job. there are villagers that are like working from sunup to sundown with their hands fending off the elements, and really stressed out, and they are not burned out, they are just working really hard. if if you have middle-management table purge paper pushers they get two weeks vacation, that is not a health risk. this is the world health organization, a u.n. group, and geraldo: does that make it automatically bad? greg: they are playing the media. jesse: trying to put capitalism as a health risk. where socialism is the actual health risk. geraldo: you think the u.n. created the phenomenon. that it is not a real deal. it is liberals trying to make up
now are putting the onus on the president. it s going to continue that way. i think nancy pelosi and the democrats know that. and so the weight is going to grow on donald trump s shoulders. the weight s going to grow and, howard, as you say, this is real talk, real people, real lives. i want to play some of the reaction. we led our broadcast with the facts, including some documentary footage from local newscasts about how this is playing out over the country. here are some of the national pundits who may be more out of the loop than you two beltway denisons, but some of them minimizing what s happening out in the country. take a look. it s a partial shutdown and something that, again, i know is disruptive, we want to avoid, but it s not the end of the world. i don t think that the american people have much sympathy, unfortunately, for bureaucrats and some paper pushers in washington, d.c. you can shut down half of the government agencies and
bureaucrats and paper pushers in washington d.c. you can shutdown half of the government agencies and it would be years, it would be years before the normal average working american would even know the department is shutdown in terms of how much it effects their lives. that tells you how blind and deaf that dog is. i feel sorry for the dog. there s a lot of problems. what it has done is it is projecting outward some scare vision and view of what a federal worker is and what a federal worker.
he meant it literally. unfortunately, it was never going to be true and won t be true. he said in the last seven days if we built the wall, it would save us hundreds of billions of dollars. hundreds of billions. that number he just pulled out of his hat. there is no evidence of that, there is no basis for saying that, but he ll say anything, and that s what makes it very difficult to figure out what a negotiating position is with him because he s just very volatile. so other than your furloughed census employees in your district, what are you hearing from people in your district? how much are athey paying attention to this, to this partial government shutdown? not much. most people are not going to feel it. there are still a lot of people who feel they are not particularly sympathetic about what they perceive to be paper pushers, bureaucrats, and of course we know that the vast
withdrawal without consulting with general mattis, and i think it s raising new questions and reopening the debate, quite frankly on the 25 amendment oh, come on. can i finish. i will come to you, jen. when somebody is unfit to serve. because, rev, if we see tweets withdrawing troops, how long will it be before we see tweets actually sending troops into harm s way without consulting our defense experts? i want to get to syria in a minute. jen, you wanted to respond. i don t think the american people have much sympathy, unfortunately, for pwraobureauc and some paper pushers are you saying the american people do not care about the federal employees going over the christmas holiday as tough as that may sound. the bureaucrats in washington,