0 any other live interview i ve had with. i m really excited to talk to him,. thanks at-home for joining us this, our happy to be. back senator bernie sanders will be live tonight. he will be here in just a few minutes. i do want to address just a quick quick personal matter here before we go on to the news, if you will indulge me for just a second. a couple of months ago susan and i went to a minor league baseball game. i sat on the aisle. she sat to my left. our team won. it was a fantastic game. i bought like all the swag, i ate all the hot dogs, it was a great time. minor league baseball, i am convinced, is god s gift to american spectator sports. at our local minor league baseball park, box seats are six bucks. the parking is free. the players are really good, but nobody really cares who wins. sometimes after the game there is fireworks. it is literally a way to spend a summer night. at this particular minor league game i went to with susan, i m sitting on her right, she s sitting
many ways. we leave afghanistan the way we arrived, with destruction, with violence, with civilian casualties. we saw so many people hyperventilating that we can t leave afghanistan, we can t abandon the afghans, but not asking what does staying involve? staying involves killing innocent afghans too, whether intentionally or not, seven kids on our way out of the door, which is a reminder the war in afghanistan might be over, but the war on terror isn t. the biden administration already talking about beyond the horizon operations or whatever the new phraseology is for the war on terror. just to get back to the question about what we have learned and lost. i heartily agree with max about the industrial military complex and how much money we spent on the goal, the wrong goal, but we did focus on this goal. i disagree respectfully with him on leadership. i think we saw leaders tell us lies over the last 20 years. tell us many, many lies. i think we saw leaders not make bold choices but tak
origins. the scientist leading that investigation said china did pressure their organization to leave out the lab leak theory and discuss basically the phraseology that they were comfortable with and not comfortable with in that regard. the state department, our state department s former lead investigator in to covid origins under secretary pompeo, dr. david asher responds to what we re now learning about this huge story and to the shocking prediction as well from robert redfield who we spoke with here on the story who believes that because it s an engineered virus in the first place, the variants are super charged. sadly i m going to predict in two, three, four months, we ll have another variant and that variant will be more infectious than the delta variant. that s how this evolution is taking place. this virus got a jump start by being one of the most infectious in humans.
so there are those that are like, oh, let s kumbaya with our colleagues from the other side of the aisle. i m saying a kumbay arkts to me is making sure people s rights are protected. that s how we can start to come together, is by getting on the right side of history. instead of continuing to disenfranchise people. that was texas democrat jasmine crockett on this broadcast last week. i think it was me laughing at some of her phraseology there. with a stern message to her fellow democrats in the united states senate, urging them to put voting rights above any desire to work with the republican party that is actively working to disenfranchise their voters. crockett and her texas democratic colleagues are in the midst of a major new legal battle with texas governor greg abbott and the state s republicans over the democrats decision to leave the state to block the gop from passing that state s restriction laws.
when it comes to pfizer and moderna. to your point, where are we headed in florida and across the country. places like florida are going to be accounting for at least 50% of potentially day over day deaths in october of about 1,000. we re headed back potentially to a place we re seeing 1,000 deaths a day in places like florida. so we really need to double down on a different communication strategy one that minimizes mask communication and maximizes that type of authentic direct to patient, direct to the individual engagement. and actually, mika if i may go ahead, doctor. i just think i just think it s really important to be clear to the american people about what success looks like, mika. and that is, we re not going to eradicate covid-19. and this is the phraseology is going to be important. i don t like the phase we have