strike strikes out so you can t strike. all right. and then you got an asian lawyer then yot. yeah. and he s he s a corporate guy. he, . sayrm you go right on.de it says dea all over it.i al what do you thin k about him now? definitely. no, because he s doing whenm you get him into the he got himl into deliberationsib and he can sway those jurors that are in there. so absolutely no , not this. we usually don t liken lawyers as jurors. i understand that. now, here s a juror that i like, puerto rican born there,ys says trump s fascinating and mysteriousascinati and he hc grandchildren. i mean, that hildres that s y good, right? yes. and i see this one is a trump apprentice. trys is someone that is really fascinated with donald trump. he finds a mysterious and ld tri think that he s going to be sitting there in on wonder, justllde watching, you know, dod trump and the jury during that whole jury process. sog th i think he is definitelyd a great defense joke. and iefiny t only
when the cubans come here and gather information, a lot of times they could sell it to other countries. when we were about to invade iraq, cuba was communicating intelligence information because of their proximity to us of saddam hussein. that s what thaikz makes them dangerous in our world because they re very aggressive and they re vy good. the record suggests that cubans have been particularly successful of getting american citizens to supply them with information. there are a number of reasons for that, but the one that strikes us the most is ideological reasons. they did not do it for money. americans who grew nupt united states in the mid to late 60s, these were college students and a lot of them seen the vietnam war going on and they were opposed to that and at the the bay of pigs we saw them trying overthrough the revolution.