one of them is one i d mentioned earlier in passing, that is the demilitarization of gaza, and there are a number of presence for this, again, removal of chemical weapons from the arsenal of bashar al assad in syria. the weapons weren t a problem in a warehouse, it was when they were used against civilians. hamas s rockets aren t a problem unless used against civilians and if the international community could remove those weapons, i think israel would accord at least implicitly with a continued hamas role in gaza. keep in mind there are other terrorist groups in gaza even more radical than hamas, elements of al qaeda, hamas at least is an organization that has some structure, has some welfare operations. so it is a big question here whether taking down hamas is the goal, because if you take down hamas, you re going to have to deal with chaos. nobody wants to do that.
in a big, big way. this is a rare look into the utah bishops central warehouse in salt lake city. there s sugar, there s salt, there s wheelchairs, there s toilet paper. a half-million square foot monument to the mormon commitment to helping others. this is crazy. rick foster is a manager of the church s welfare operations. it looks like there is almost everything in here to sustain human life. is that an exaggeration? it is not at all. nothing extravagant, but basic commodities you would find in any grocery store. this would make the people from costco jealous, i think. it almost seems endless. and almost everything in here was produced by the church for charity. almost everything was used to
another very interesting note, harry, is that when you look at the mormon faith, they are very self-reliant. they even have their own safety net. can you tell us about that. yeah, i ll tell you. we had an amazing experience. we had a very rare look inside a place called the bishop s warehouse, just outside of salt lake city. well, you should take a look. reporter: this is a rare look into the utah bishop s central warehouse in salt lake city. but there s sugar, there s salt, there s wheelchairs, there s toilet paper. a half-million square foot monument to the mormon commitment to helping others. this is crazy. rick foster is a director of the church s welfare operations. it looks to me like there s almost everything in here to sustain human life. is that an exaggeration? it is not at all. nothing extravagant, but basic