conservative enough. it was not a full did he say that? that s what he s going to say. let s see what his constituents say about that answer. that s the freedom caucus position. they say ryan s plan is still obamacare. they want even less support. they want to get rid of it all. one thing this has taught me is people don t ask about korea or what s happening in mesopotamia, they care about what s happening on their table, when they got to pay the bills. so this is all about usually disability payments, social security checks, medicare problems, am i eligible for this? notch babies. this is the real politics in real politics country. and it s personal problems. you re talking to people who are talking about what directly affects them. it s their health insurance, their social security. it s not talking points, and it s not nameless, faceless people you can tell some reporter on the hill that you may have met at one point in time. it s actual people. you know what there are
in the last interview that susan rice as national security adviser with journalists, the wednesday before inauguration, she was asked what s the number one thing president trump is going to have to worry about? north korea. we all know that. i mean we re all reading the papers. it s scary because we don t have a khrushchev or bresch nerve, somebody on this side who might an ideologue. we don t know what kim jong-un s interests are. do we deal with them now before i think it might be the right point. it s scary. it s a scary point. who wants to wait for him to have his full arsenal? exactly. all you need in that gun is one bullet, chris. frighteningly true. john unanimous capehart, that s why you write the big stuff. ned ryan, thank you, sir. up next, republicans back home are facing angry town halls. catch 22. if you have a town meeting, they come and attack you. if you don t have one, they come and attack you. watch this.
castro told somebody i know once, big mistake. why did he do it? so mistakes are made even by reasonable people like khrushchev. how do you find reason from kim jong-un? how do you get him to make a rational decision about the future of his country and his own life? well, first of all, as everyone said, the big problem is kim jong-un the big problem is kim jong-un, unlike his father, seems to have zero interest in negotiations. his father had some interest in it, and his interest was because he cared about the relationship with china. kim jong-un has essentially no relationship with china. they ve never even invited him during his five years of rule. so there s a real problem getting to kim jong-un. i d also like to point out that some of these the ideas of preemptive strikes, i think we need to remember that our relationship here on the korean peninsula is not with north korea. it s with south korea. it s with our ally.
series sing. i m very, very proud to be a part of it. you know, i think very little has been said about the second premiership of churchill, the part that wasn t so glorious, that was difficult for him. he was getting old. he had stayed on too long, you know. he left a he should have stepped down, and you played staying on till the end the wonderful thing that he did to raise the queen. great stuff. it s an unexplored moment of history really, the early 1950s, in britain in particular, a nation that supposedly had won a war and yet they felt like a defeated country. and churchill was the old victorian, the child of empire, and the empire was slipping away. that s his particular drama. you know, the series has like six concurrent stories. his story is the man who is growing old and is hanging on too long. well, i have to congratulate you on everything you ve done. i have to tell you we all loved terms of endearment when we first met you in that safeway
happened, so and what i do is i authorize my military. we have given them authorization, and that s what they re doing. and frankly that s why they ve been so successful lately. if you look at what s happened over the last eight weeks and compare that really to what s happened over the last eight years, you ll see there s a tremendous difference. the associated press reports the trump administration is now exerting maximum pressure to engage with north korea so that they can give up actually their push for nuclear weapons. we talked about that last segment. taken together, all this shows the evolution of president trump s military posture. the question is does he have the ability to pull it off? i m joined by jonathan capehart, opinion writer for the washington post, and ned ryan, ceo of american majority, a former speechwriter for george w. bush. i guess the concern here is the guy is commander in chief with tremendous authority, even in decision-making about attacks on countr