not only the ones in the prisons but the ones going around in san francisco and shooting kate and jamele and people that should be with us. okay. then we have a law, right? you re supposed to come in legally. i would get people out and have an expedited way of getting them back into the country so they could be legal. hold on. let me hold on that point right there. when you say get people out, are you talking about a mass deportation? we don t even know who these people are. but how do you find them? we have to find them. how do you do that? excuse me we have to find them. politicians aren t going to find them because they have no clue. we will find them we will get them out. when you say still, get them out, just the process of that. there are a lot of smart people who have been focused on this for a long time to say it s not just feasible. it s feasible if you know how to manage. politicians don t know how to manage. we have to bring great people into this country, ok
support. so if there is no arrangement for her to be transported, the hospital will pull the plug and the breathing will stop and the heart stop and jahi be declared dead once and for all. that may be a point of closure for the family to let them know this is love support helping her to breathe, and once the life support is terminated and poory jahi goes on her own, many that will provide closure for the family. one of this cases where the law and medicine are not fully prepared to deal with all of the consequences that can come about. exactly. the consequences of the family and how they re coming to terms with the untimely death of this little girl. too you expect there will be legal actions down the flood have there been other cases like this? or is this one absolutely groundbreaking? i think there will be legal actions just for the mere fact that jahi lost her life after
locals hope he will give them more details on the federal aid. but people on the ground want to focus on getting the recovery going. and the people we spoke to early or, who were just trying to retrieve their things. they say while the president is good here, ultimately his visit is something of a hindrance. take a listen. it s more of a hindrance at this point. there are family it s we are on the edge of the corridor, but families want to get in there to recover stuff. they have 21 day left to get their keepsakes and they are not able to do that today. sometimes you wonder if it does have any effect. i hope so. a lot of people here need that help from the government. reporter: will the federal government give help isn t state put together a $45 million fund to help those affected. but that s the entire storm season, it s a drop in the ocean of the help that people need here. hopefully words and plems from the president that more aid is
shannon: to that point, senator mccain said he thought it was incredible. he said that al qaeda has been expanding. it is not the time to back down. the president isn t saying it s time to back down. i think that s a misstatement what have the president is talking about. but he is saying that the threat has changed and the approach to it has changed. yes, we have the fwoakus on al qaeda, wherever it exists, but it is not the same core leadership and the top-down architecture of 9/11. that mean wiese have to shift our approach too. i think the president is signaling, too, that the drone campaign in guantanamo and some of the approaches we have used post 9/11 have also had their costs. yes, he s acknowledged they have had their benefits and he is not curtailing the drone program, he is reining it in. but he is saying, there is a strategic impact as it takes people off the battlefield and create new jihadis to go after that, as a rallying cry.
safe spot? we see the destruction, those of us who are only seeing it long distance, it s hard to even fathom by looking at the pictures, what have you experienced. what shape was this school in, the pot where you tried to shelter together? it was total devastation. there was nothing left. shannon: at some point, i understand. at some point, i understand that you all were basically trapped there, how did you eventually get out with your three children? well, when the tormaido hit, the roof was the first thing to go. and then, the walls collapsed on top of us. and when it was all scpaid done and it was over, we had our three kids in between us and there was a man that walked by and he said he was going to get us out. i told him, i said, i need to you get my kids out because this wall s not going to hold up.