how they are building the case, what they have, what they don t, of course whether we get to read it as a very different question. the michael flynn memo, you remember it so well. the very best stuff in there was all blacked out. martha: indeed it was. thank you very much. joining me now is jason chaffet chaffetz, a fox news contributor and also michael it s a cough, the yahoo needs to make . michael, i will start with you. give us the thumbnail sketch of what you will be watching for when these documents come out. we are all going to be poring over them with a fine tooth comb. michael: is a critical witness. the plea agreement last week in which she acknowledged he lied to protect donald trump about his negotiations with
you a thumbnail sketch of what we are watching so they feel like they are ready to watch when that all rolls out. so that sitting president loses seats in the house but this is not a conventional president and may not be a conventional year. look at 2016 and those polls that we will not be using here at fox i think everybody should stick around to see how that works it is quite unconventional and interesting obviously that remains to be seen no doubt on tuesday night and everybody want to stick around to see what happens.
there s going to be a next week. you have to deal with the people who are your opposition. in many ways, it is that balance. the federalist papers, the united states is designed for that. we really need leaders who are mature enough to see a middle road. martha: you talk about the comparison, you make an analogy to plutarch s live and margaret thatcher. give us a thumbnail sketch of what we can expect in your book with regards to that comparison. sure come in the new book leaders, myth and reality, we look at 13 leaders, margaret thatcher, what we are really doing is exploring why they were back would emerge as leaders. what we find is they are not two-dimensional caricatures, they are really very rich, flawed people, and that is what
community is going to sustain them anymore. there s no sewer, no electricity, no running water, no television. anything this community ever had is totally wiped out. it s not going to be back for at least a year or more. let me just tell you as sun sets, it s going to completely dark. one of the evening rituals that begins is that you start to see first responders clearing the roads, doing the searching for those that are still missing. all that comes to an end. it s too dangerous and difficult in the darkness. there is no light to be found in this town. so it all begins to shut down. that s not to say that law enforcement goes away. they don t. the national guard closes in, so does the county sheriffs and the other sheriffs that are here. and then you have the local police department as well. they secure the place. but as far as the work of trying to recover that all just comes to an end. you can see there s still so much more to be done. governor scott was here earlier in the day, an
those kids, because, again, their voices are important, learning their stories and why they are in there and how they feel. that was important. i didn t given the opportunity to do that. we re going to hopefully in a few moments. right, before you go, though, quickly, i do want to ask you, when we look at these images and again many of the images inside the facility are images that have been supplied by the government, so you re looking at some of the kids, at least from the back, looks like they are all wearing the same t-shirts and even shorts. is there anything you ve learned about the process when they get in? how are they processed, you know, there is uniformity in terms of what they are wearing. we see the pictures of art activities, et cetera. can you give us a kind of thumbnail sketch of what they go through? oh, sure thing. so, what we were told by the director here at the homestead facility is that when the kids arrive, first they go through