aggressively, that places like nbc are. and they want to say they re not a media company. so enough with this, i m just a tech guy. you know, this interview s tough for me. baloney. let me say this. first of all, my disclosure is, i am not a facebook customer, but i have a family member, my son-in-law works there. secondly, i note they have lost something like $50 billion. $50 billion in market value. i think they can make rent. steph, first, this is an existential crisis? or just a bad week? listen, it s a black eye. but at the end of the day, the biggest risk they face now really is regulation. you know, delete facebook might be a trending hash tag, but it remains to be seen whether anyone is actually going to delete it in a significant way. we re not their customers. their customers are the advertisers. we re their product. and america people have decided, we want to put our information out there because we love looking at pictures of babies and pussycats and ex-boyf
defense finally caught up with him and he was sentenced to time in prison a racketeering, drug and bribery charges. today he worries about another threat. terrorism. and feels the nation has not done enough to defeat it. you think we ve been too easy? chrissy katz on terrorism. pussycats? what should we do? quest kill them. he was astounded that the manchester bombing was two authorities and says that just in back in the mob, he would take care of the problem himself. i wish i could get four more enemy. the government would have to pay they would be glad soon as they were able to point out a clue. their own kind, white, black, they will kill anybody. give me their names. i will take care of the business. you would -
standing: the secret life of mob boss ralph natale. i never heard a man that was innocent, hard worker, i never touched a woman, never touched em, they never reporter: they tally became head of the philadelphia mafia in the late 1990s brought in by angelo bruno who ended up getting shot to death in his car in 980. natale survived and thrived in the city of brotherly love before the feds finally caught up with him in 2005. he was sentenced to 13 years in prison on racketeering, drug and biblely charges. but today he worries about another threat, terrorism, and fears the nation has not done enough to defeat it. do you think we ve been too easy oh, we re pussycats. reporter: on terrorism. pussycats. pussycats. reporter: what should we do? kill em. reporter: natale was astounded that the manchester
activated effort. and i think women were there were marching for a whole host of reasons, i think a lot of women and men and their allies were there because they were very concerned at the tone during the campaign. they re concerned that their voices may not be heard, in this administration, frankly, the man s been president for 90 hours, we don t know what he s going to do or not going to do, i think people were there to send a message. the pussycats wanted to be heard roaring. and that s exactly what they did. so let s not get into this narrow silo about abortion. you guys are falling straight for that trap. go ahead, rachel. the point that when you note the busy hats, i think the whole point, it was an unbelievably organic movement. women knit their own hats and it exploded in an organic way, atop the heads of all the marchers, in if an unmissable way, the
everybody says, is he going to be somebody who is going to be too boisterous, rambunctious to play well outside of new jersey. and then, if you stack all of those personalities up against donald trump, they look like pussycats, right? juxtaposed, certainly. kasich received a big endorsement today. one i am sure many expected to gravitate toward jeb bush. is jeb bush the candidate most hurt by kasich s gains? let s focus on the state that john kasich is working on. new hampshire. where we saw, the former state attorney general endorse him. when you look at new hampshire, there are two types of voters in new hampshire. the liberty voters. rand paul voters. ron paul voters. and then everybody else. when you are looking at lanes in politics you would have to think john kasich would be hurting jeb bush more so because he has the same kind of cadence. he talks in the same way abouter use. and he tries to modulate himself. so in many ways, he would be hurting not only jeb bush but the lik