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yeah. i mean, one thing to say that you have to remember china is very different from japan because there are so many chinese. they don t have to be as productive as we are to become the world s largest economy. so by some measures they already are. but they are also having a lot of problems. the chinese model, it really does seem to be coming apart at the seams right now. and the u.s., look, america has been, at least it is a very i think our openness, our openness to different people, to different ideas, our creativity that comes out of that has been our underlying strength. and i mean, if you think about how did america do so well in high-tech. there are a lot of reasons. a lot of that is in silicon valley, the claim is, the anecdote is that venture capitalists won t back a company unless it has a few east asians involved because we need the diversity of ideas and diversity and our openness, our openness to new ideas has been our huge strength. i do worry given e ....
Acceptable levels fairly soon, look far better than it did just two or three months ago. paul, joe scarborough here. i want to ask you about something. this is your life. you ve been working this for years now. but it seems to me every 20, 30 years we hear a country is going to overtake the united states. i always laugh when i think back to 1987, 88, 89 and japanese are going to turn america into its grainery. we heard the same thing about china. and yet we get a report that u.s. dollar is stronger now against all other currencies than any other currency. you could talk for a moment about the resilience of the united states economy through the years and how we re it seems we re always underestimated and the economy keeps doing very well relatively to the rest of the world? ....
The accusation that jason, in his 911 call, was trying to push back the time of shirley s death to morning hours when he had been accounted for on video at the grainery. looks like she s been laying here for two hours. this is all happening within a matter of minutes. jason was simply so distraught, and to say, you know, you should ve done this and you should ve done that at this and that, i think is just ridiculous. reporter: as for jason s affair? wandro told the jury it was irrelevant, a salacious distraction, and of course jason lied about it to preserve his family. if you want to characterize him as a bad guy for carrying on an affair, fine. but that doesn t make the man a killer. reporter: jason s wife, shelly, told the jury despite everything she still supported her husband. every day i work on forgiving, but never forgetting. ....
The remington rifle ejects a shell casing between shots. at least one of those would have flown out, as the killer racked another round in the chamber to shoot shirley twice. it was never found. so somebody had the presence of mind to gather it up? that s correct. reporter: and since webb promised to look at every possibility, he examined bill s movements the day of the killing. phone records show shirley making a call from the house phone at 8:45 a.m., after bill had dropped her off. and by 9:00 a.m., bill was spotted did he grainery, 50 miles from the house. webb said bill s only opportunity to kill her, was after that. bill has to leave the grainery. he has to get home, kill his wife, shirley, and then leave before jason can get there. is it impossible for bill to do all this toing and froing in the time allowed? it would certainly be a very tight timeline. squeaky to get it done, huh? certainly. reporter: then the private analyst looked at jason s timeline. he ....
reporter: jason would carry on the farming tradition for another generation. and best of all he and his wife, shelly, lived close by. bill and shirley soon had grandchildren to dote on. a happy family picture suddenly disfigured by the ugly murder of shirley carter. dci agent mark ludwick took the lead in the investigation. first, we want to identify all witnesses and we want to separate tehem and we want to conduct a face-to-face sit-down interview as soon as we can. reporter: early on, the most important witnesses were bill, the husband, and jason, the son. ludwick assigned deputies to take the two down to the pleasantville pd. and uh, she said do you want to go get coffee? reporter: in an interview room, bill told investigators the same story he told us. how he dropped shirley off at home and then ran a load of corn to the grainery and then he raced home to find his wife still on the floor. and when i went in and i felt her, she was cold. ....