what a tragedy this is for everyone. being as deep in this subject matter as you are and knowing the campus as well as you do, having gone there, is there anything that could have stopped what happened last night? i think we don t really have the answer to that yet, right, because the fbi and michigan state police will do the background on this individual who did the shooting to see maybe if there were tells and science, and there were people who saw something and did not say something, which is kind of my biggest fear, of course. but i think overall, i think we have to use when we push together what everybody wants, which is the answer to the motivation for why this guy did this, looking for the motivation is really helping us to find the next shooter, before the strike, and that s why we want to continue to look for the information about why this guy did what he did, not because we can make him not do it but because we can make the next kind not do it. we don t seem to
he is reacting against what he feels inside, which is the steady loss of his power as a man. the faster that power recedes, the more frantically he asserts it. he is raging against the dying of the light. these last embarrassing decisions are in fact his death throes. it is sad, really. unfortunately what happens to men also tends to happen to the systems they create. for the last 80 years our world has been covered by a system formed in the final months of world war ii. it s features define our life. free and open global trade routes guaranteed by the u.s. navy, a universal currency called the dollar and overseein it all one supreme power, the worlds largest economy, the united states of america. it s been a great system in mos ways. but for many reasons, including the passage of time, that syste is dying. what comes next is not entirely clear but how to influence it t america s greatest advantage is the most important task that faces any u.s. government. nothing else comes
it s their constitutional obligation to do that. we re talking about programs when they talk about medicare, social security, we re talking about programs that they want to take hostage that will affect taxpayers, that will affect seniors and veterans. again, it s their constitutional duty. they should do this without conditions. trying to address market-related chatters. jerome powell was asked about the debt ceiling. there s only one option. for congress to pass the increase. is that the crew here, there s one option, there s no off ramps to consider? congress is the only option here? on any of the coins that s come up before. that s something that the treasury deals with and answers on. so i m not going to comment there. i think we ve been very clear from here that this should be done without conditions. and it is their basic job, congress, right? it s their basic duty to lift the debt ceiling. it s something that has been consistently done over the years. that s how
we figured anyone still at the top of his game, quitting his game after 23 years, that is a big story. he is a big story. now let me be clear, not like adele quitting a promising singing career in her prime, big story, she s in her own luscious league. i digress. tom brady, a big deal. he s leaving the national football team. fox on top of a world that has to adjust. your world right now. welcome. i m neil cavuto. on this earth shattering v development, the goat says he s really going this time. phil keating has more. as you know, he s been retired once before last year. that lasted 40 days. then brady went back to the grid iron. he s won a record seven super bowls with the new england patriots and the tampa bay buccaneers. when he made his video selfie announcement about the retirement, well, brady got a little choked up. i really thank you guys so much, to every single one of you for supporting me. my family, my friends, my teammates. my competitors. i could go on forev
i remember as a child being around these huge animals, that sense of mystery and might. i think i can hear it. it s just amazing that these animals are filling the ocean with their sounds and their song. they are very simple sounds, but for me they are super beautiful. it s summer. whales are gathering along patagonia s pacific coast. home to the fjordlands, long, deep, flooded valleys that were carved out by glaciers over millions of years. these remote, rich waters are a magnet for wildlife and increasingly for people. at the ends of the earth is a land of extremes. home to spectacular wildlife. for centuries people and animals have battled for supremacy, but now enemies are becoming allies. together they face new challenges in our rapidly changing world. you are at the mercy of the elements. this is the story of what it takes to survive on the edge of the world. it s the start of another all too brief summer. patagonia s 600 glaciers are rapidly melting. fres