jerusalem to palestinian family to a palestinian culture and i m not ashamed to say that i m arab palestinian but i also live in israel and also feel israeli. in some ways, i don t know. i just say i come from jerusalem and i m a journalist, and that s two most important things of my identity. i grew up in the old city of jerusalem, playing soccer in the al aqsa mosque compound attending a strict islamic boys school, though he now reports the news in fluent hebrew, he did not learn the language until he was 20 years old, which is just seven years ago. what prompted you to want to become a reporter back in the second intifada? i lived in in the altar in jerusalem. and you remember that? the explosions and the busses and in jerusalem and i didn t know what s happening. you know, i didn t speak hebrew and it just look at the tv and i felt that i want to
though he now reports the news in fluent hebrew, did not learn the language until he was 20 years old, which is just seven years ago. what prompted you to want to become a reporter back in the second intifada? i lived in in the altar in jerusalem. and you remember that? the explosions and the busses and in jerusalem and i didn t know what s happening. you know, i didn t speak hebrew and i just look at the tv and i felt that i want to be there like i want to report. i want to do something. his journey to journalism was not a straight one working at a hotel studying accounting at a palestinian university and then learning hebrew before attending an israeli college landed an internship with the israeli public broadcaster. cons. arabic channel. and after it jumped to the network s main hebrew channel, he became jerusalem correspondent where he s covered everything from clashes between police and palestinians in
israel and also feel israeli. in some ways, i don t know. i just say i come from jerusalem and i m a journalist, and that s two most important things of my identity. i grew up in the old city of jerusalem, playing soccer in the al aqsa mosque compound attending a strict islamic boys school, though he now reports the news in fluent hebrew, he did not learn the language until he was 20 years old, which is just seven years ago. what prompted you to want to become a reporter back in the second intifada? i lived in the altar in jerusalem. and you remember that? the explosions and the busses and in jerusalem and i didn t know what s happening. you know, i didn t speak hebrew and i just look at the tv and i felt that i want to be there like i want to report. i want to do something. his journey to journalism was not a
through these towns. at least we should be alerted to it that s a reasonable request. ainsley: pete buttigieg says we have thousands of train derailments quite often. that is alarming. this could happen to your town. steve: we mentioned when i was a reporter back in the dale day. i used to do to train derailments. they oftentimes were just carting wheat to market and not poisonous chemicals. but they can also update the systems. how the trains stop. how the trains go. all that stuff could be updated. ultimately the biden administration is really taking it on the chin because of, you know, a lot of people are furious and there has been a talking point where, you know, he goes abroad but he doesn t come here item in politico rare for a transportation secretary to go to a derailment. during the trump administration apparently even when there were derailments, transportation