in our s commitment that he is meeting at the summit? you have to look at what meeting at the summit? you have to look at what people meeting at the summit? you have to look at what people do meeting at the summit? you have to look at what people do now - meeting at the summit? you have to look at what people do now but - meeting at the summit? you have to look at what people do now but they| look at what people do now but they say and what should be happening, clearly, is that indigenous people should be getting their rights back to their own land. == should be getting their rights back to their own land. should be getting their rights backj to their own land. a to their own land. bolsonaro. a lot of this to their own land. bolsonaro. a lot of this isn t to their own land. bolsonaro. a lot of this isn t actually to their own land. bolsonaro. a lot of this isn t actually mapped, l lot of this isn t actually mapped, so, now, idon t lot of this isn t actually mapped
it isa it is a very big task for the international community. thank you for civina international community. thank you for giving us international community. thank you for giving us a international community. thank you for giving us a rounded international community. thank you for giving us a rounded view. - for giving us a rounded view. i ve also been talking to several experts about historical parallels, how to see this and look at the region and one of those was o hanlon, senior are at the institution in washington and he s written so much in afghanistan, you may know osama bin laden kept a book by him on his book shelf. the speed at which taliban have taken control of afghanistan today is astonishing, he says. it of afghanistan today is astonishing, he sa s. , ., , of afghanistan today is astonishing, he sa s. , ., ., ., he says. it is remarkable at one level. he says. it is remarkable at one level- the he says. it is remarkable at one level. the whole he says. it is remar
little bit short. measuring up to christian julie brand, long time defender of anthony weiner, harvey weinstein, and bill clinton peered she hasnt recently been reborn. here s a selection from a few of her sermons over just the past week. this country was founded on some basic moral principles. that we have a moral compass as a nation, or morality as a country is literally on an edge. for me, it is a moral question. m i have been called to fight as hard as i possibly can to restore that moral decency. tucker: for me, it is a moral question. keep in mind. keep in mind also that she is not just fighting for moral integrity andra decency, she sas she has been called at 25 for these things. youig know who called her, don t you? it wasn t her friend, anthony weiner, from the prison pay phone. no, it was god himself.
gentleman he died protecting our country. it belonged to her dad the purple hard awarded to him after his death. nesbit just 21 years old mar kwl maried his high school sweetheart. she sas the daughter he would never met. his purposele heart lost when the family moved. there are people hout there who i will lever know who have come together and made this
honeymoon, my wife threw my autographed book of newt gingrich out and said it was her or the book. she sas bitter memories toward him and is typical of a lot of women in the south. but he also has a different angle, as well. he converted from being a southern baptist to a catholic. when you go to iowa or to south carolina or to georgia and the other southern states, converting from an evangelical southern baptist to catholicism also strikes people as odd. good call there throwing the book out. i applaud you for that one. when you look at this, and be as fair as you can here, newt gingrich is the boogeyman to a lot of democrats. he was sparring with bill clinton for so often. but when you look at newt gingrich, do you think it s the personal stuff that will be the big issue or is it simply when you re talking about a primary that he s last generation, not