i think it is the opposite. part of my job which i try to do is not just fold and normalize. so if another president, say,to in the new york times to be considering pardoning convicted war criminals, charged with murder, convicted of war crimes, convicted of, i ll say it again, urinating on the deceased bodies of other soldiers. i don t think it would be a side story or a mentionable of i think it would be one of the biggest scandals for weeks. i think there would be whole committees just looking into that. we discussed a lot of issues. i also pressed him on this report that we ve been covering on our show. and this was his response to the potential pardons for war crimes. take a look. the dang would it do would be incalculab incalculable. if you say nice things about me, if you have my back, i ll have
patrol and the moments some 27 hours later where she died. she was eventually taken as well as the antelope wells forward operating base where she was first held for some eight hours. and they have very critical words for conditions that both of those facilities when they spoke a short time ago. listen here. what i saw in this facility is unbelievable and unmentionable. the spca would not allow how animals the way humans were being treated. and the border patrol says the agent did everything they could to help that girl, but they were hampered by the fact that there were four agents and
and i think as soon as you know what? you ve just put your finger on it. if it s mentionable, it s manageable. yeah. if you look at all the things that at one time were taboo and aren t anymore, the change is that it became a topic of discussion, that it became something we spoke about. i mean, if you look at the trans community, these people always existed. they just were living in personal hells where they couldn t expose themselves. and what it took was and it continues to take is that it just becomes a part of a conversation, you know. and then it s not so crazy anymore. there is that and obviously this ongoing gender gap in all sorts of ways. you have said, or at least you act with your comedy as though comedy would be a remedy to that. and i just want to play a skit that you did on the wage gap. every year the average woman
four xanax four times a day when i was 14 years old. she really lives entirely in anxiety, in that state we all get in occasionally of what if, what if i never write another joke, what if i never fall in love again, what if, what if. we tell ourselves horror stories. and that s anxiety. and she exists in that space this her head. what if i ruin my kids. what if i pass my genes on to them. what if i abandon them. and there is no space for anything else. i think that so many people, they think of self-loathing and being self-deprecating as some kind of modesty. it real isn t. it s self-obsession. there is no room for anything else. there is manage that makes them not booze anymore. darkness cannot exist in the light. and when you put light on things, it changes what they are. yeah. i mean, it goes back to mr. rogers, you know. if it s mentionable, it s manageable.
so we want to shift attention now and update everybody on the current state of politics. it starts with donald trump. thousands expected at the gop front-runner s rally tonight in dallas. a preview perhaps of the much-anticipated second republican debate wednesday in simi valley. latino activists are planning a dump the trump march to counteract what will likely be a rousing message centered around trump s number one issue, illegal immigration. the latest polls out of new hampshire as well as nationally all say the same thing. trump is still the gop s teflon don. in new hampshire, he s at 28%. nationally, 33%. dr. ben carson, running second in both polls. that abc news/washington post poll has dr. carson polling at 20% and that is mentionable because he s the first challenger to poll that high since trump entered the race back in june. that might explain why carson has come under recent fire from donald. and it s true.