couplings and cummings and these guys put aside 2020 for five minutes and say what worked in new york when you turn new york around, what worked, what didn t work. let s look at it. put it on a piece of paper and say. there s some policies that work, some don t. i wouldn t be able to vote if that was the case. laura: i think i m happy with that conclusion. laura: you could come up with five things that worked and five things that didn t. take republican democrats off of the sheet. i think that could actually happen. it s really hard when you cry racism, it shuts the conversation down. and it s even harder when there is racism. laura: that shuts lives down. we have a president that isn t racist and not afraid to stand up when people baselessly call him racist and are able to point out the flaws and the democratic leadership in inner cities is destroying black america. laura: we will always have a spirited conversation on this show.
underground from the navy may have triggered it. we ve set off pretty large nuclear blasts without setting off a earthquake. the largest is a magnitude 2. the epicenter for this one is ten miles beneath the surface. is there anything about this earthquake that s surprising at all to you? the size. no, in a way, as dr. jones was explaining after the 6.4, there was a possibility of having a larger event. and sure enough, we did. and you know, the mechanics of these two faults, the conjugate faulting makes a lot of sense. from a scientific or gee logic perspective. i would say no, there s not really any surprises we ve seen so far. what can be you learn from it. hopefully number one, learn more about how earthquakes work. number two, i think there s teams out there looking at damage, how buildings responded. every earthquake is a chance to learn what will worked, what
navy triggered this? no. we have set off pretty large nuclear blasts without setting off an earthquake. the hypo center for this one is 10 miles. it reporter: is there anything about this earthquake that is surprising at all to yo? no, in a way. as dr. jones was explaining yesterday after the 6.4, there was a possibility of having a larger event and sure enough, we did. the mechanics of these two fault actually makes a lot of sense. from a geologic or scientific perspective. i would say no, there is not really any surprises that we ve seen. reporter: what have you learned from it? number one, learned a little bit more about how earthquakes work. number two, there are teams out there looking at damage, how buildings responded, every earthquake is a chance to learn what worked, what didn t work
nobody is going to do more to listen to voters, to talk about his ideas, his solutions. so i think you will see nobody working harder on the campaign trail than joe biden. how much people do you expect to come to philadelphia for this rally today? the site will hold about 2,000 people, so something in that area. but we re excited about the energy here and we think we think it will be a great event. thank you for your time. phillipe, i want to turn to you first and talk about how you look at what happens in 2016 and use that as a way you can see what went wrong, what didn t work in 2016 and migrate it to 2020. so let s use joe biden as the person to which we do that. what will you counsel they do differently than you guys did in 2016? david and i were talking about this before we came on. this motion of biden as a gaffe machine and he has to bite his
presidents with people overseas. the whole team gets together because national security is a team sport. the quarterback can t do everything by himself. neither donald trump nor any other president republican or democrat that i ve worked under is an expert on russia or anything else for that matter. so you get briefed up by your team beforehand. there are some strange circumstances which occasionally the principal would say i d like to do this one-on-one. it does not happen often. and more rarely with the president. but inevitably at the end of it, the president or the senior comes back and then back briefs the team that briefed him. everybody wants to share the wealth. everybody who wants to protect u.s. interests wants to compare notes, see what happened, what worked, what didn t work. and above all, the principal that went in wants to come back and say you gave me good prep or this didn t work out like you told me it would. the fact the president didn t do that is explained by one t