joining me now is the founder and ceo of advancing health equity. thank you so much for being here. sister, i appreciate you being here. so let s start. you responded to the tweet. the thing i think wasn t the first tweet so much where she said her own kind of connection to getting the vaccine had to do with working which for a lot of people the mandates are why they re going to do it. it was that second tweet where she said a friend of a friend of a friend somehow wound up with impotence related problems. and you tweeted i d love to talk to you about the covid vaccine. impotence is more likely from covid. that is one of the things they say it ll make you infertile, impotent. are there any kinds of instances of these happening from the vaccine? thank you for having me.
i mean, this wasn t the first terrorist attack. it was maybe the 500th terrorist attack. it wasn t the first attack on america. 1993 was. the attack on the israeli team at the munich 0lympics goes back to 1972, after all. so i think what this did was it didn t change anything that was going on in the world. it changed our appreciation of the world. i think someone attributed to bin laden i think i m right about this, i think it was bin laden or somebody, one of the terrorist leaders that maybe this whole attack turned out to be a mistake because it awakened a sleeping giant. and i think, in a way, this was a terrible mistake for them because, even if it s going to take 20 30 years, islamic extremist terrorism will eventually be destroyed. rudy giuliani, we have to end it there, but thank you very much for being on hardtalk. thank you, thanks a lot.
what has to happen is that people have to decide that these other things are more important, which sometimes happens. all right. but i can t. .. but my views are my views on the social issues, and i m going to remain that way. before we end, ijust want to return, in a way, to thinking about the meaning of this particular place where we are right now. everybody in america seems to be talking about extracting the meaning from 9/11. some argue that, actually, although it felt and i was in north america at the time, too although it felt like the world had fundamentally changed forever on that terrible day, maybe the world didn t change quite as much as we thought as a result of 9/11. well, i don t think the world changed at all on september 11th. i think september 11th allowed us to perceive more clearly realities that were going on in the world since at least the 19605, 19705. i mean, this wasn t the first terrorist attack. it was maybe the 500th terrorist attack. it wasn t the first
there any conversation beforehand to let you know this could be something that is coming or was the first time you heard of it? wasn t the first i heard of it but there wasn t any advance notice of it either, the first day of football practice, i was given the notice from my son explaining what the program was and if parents didn t sign it their children were not allowed to play sports. what was your son s reaction, was he just signed or was he hesitant? the kids this year are dying to play. the season was really messed up, they got their play, a third of their games, the kids are dying to play, they don t understand the ramifications, they are please let us play, we will do whatever we have to do.
after the attack. here it is. i told her how sorry i was, and i promised her that it would not be like this again the next time she came back to the capitol with me. and you know what she said? she said, dad, i don t want to come back to the capitol. of all the terrible, brutal things i saw and i heard on that day and since then, that one hit me the hardest. listen, i hate to have you relive that because i know you were suffering a loss in your family, and there was a horrible, horrible time for you. do you fear january 6th could happen again? well, it certainly will happen again. i mean january 6th wasn t the first outbreak of this. remember, there was a plot to kidnap and assassinate michigan governor whitmer and a siege of