government involved in this one. i actually said, go ahead, fine people. it s a little larger for a second offense. it s a big problem. it can get into your water, stream drink water, it can be a tox in. if he does it business and is sick and you clean the back yard your kids, do they come in, they can get parasites. did you take pakts of this situation? you will have to have a neighborhood watch. will you have that person say, oh, did their dog book and they didn t clean it up today? if that hatches, are they going to go call the town and the town will come and enforce it? that s a great point. are you in favor of this or not? i am not in favor of this. i think it s a slip i have slope of the government infringeing on our private property. what s next? christmas decorations, i can t keep them up until july? okay, it s a community. what will it do to the community? you have dog do all around in the back yard. look at the hoarders.
and then often these parents, if they feel compelled to talk, they become advocates for educating people. i d like to add that i heard during the earlier discussion one person say, well, this could rise to a criminal criminal negligence. but i argue that plenty of domestic accidents happen every day, every year, all across the country. a child gets out the back door that was supposed to be locked and accidentally drowns in the pool. a child falls down their stairs and breaks their neck and dies or becomes paralyzed. and those parents are not charged because it was an accident. but people do not understand or can t conceive and within gene s article that it could ever happen to them. and i was one of those parents. i ve heard of stories of this happening before hi son died. and the first thing i said that was an irresponsible parent because there is no way you can
that s a bad position to put your party, i think. i think you re right here. robert gibbs, no doubt about it. there are conservatives not just conservatives. nancy pelosi admitted people in her district oppose this. go to conservatives that have always been reluctant to go to war. until george w. bush. they are going back to the position where we were against bosnia and kosovo. those people go back to their district. i was in pensacola labor day weekend. man, i didn t meet one person that didn t come up to me, grab my arm and say, what s going on? congressman, what s going on? not msnbc viewers? i i tried to block the signal. i can still go to the coffee cup. i didn t hear one person say,
person who wouldn t give his identification number. what did that person say was happening to david? the very first thing he said to me he was being detained by that point already three hours, which made me know it was much more than a secondary screening of immigration. i asked if i could speak to him or have a lawyer from the guardian speak to him. they said you cannot speak to him and he does not have the right to have a lawyer present with him. i asked them their intentions and how long he would be held and they said they had no idea. you said they took a laptop, your cell phone and more. do you know what was stored on those devices? was there classified material? i don t know that. i was just taking those materials back to glenn.
we were never in afghanistan because of afghanistan. because everybody knew that afghanistan couldn t be fixed but we were there and you talk about the disconnect, this is the most shocking thing and we ve talked about this all the time and we talked about this in real-time in 2009 and 2010 and 2 2011, of all the speeches we ve given, the book tours we ve done, college campuses we went to, civic organizations we went to, we never had one person stand up and say, you know what, that war in afghanistan, i m for it. i understand why we re spending $2 billion a week. mika, over four years, in over 400, 500 events never once did one person say, yeah, we need to be in afghanistan. they would say we need that money at home to rebuild our schools, not to build their schools. and this is one of the greatest disconnects i think between washington and middle america