A recap of the day s news.
love trump or whether you disdain him, i think everyone can collectively agree that his relationship with the truth there s a major disconnect. there was one report i saw said he told 2100 lies since office. another one said 3,000. another five a day. another ten a day. if you sit down with mueller, if they don t have obstruction, we don t know whether they do. he s tweeting. his state of mind is all over the place. he could say he fired comey. if they don t have obstruction and there is no collusion conspiracy, it s conspiracy, but the fact is you can get him on perjury. so why take the chance of going sitting with mueller no matter how smooth you think you are, no matter what you think you can say when you re going to get caught in a lie because you will lie because that s what this president does, period. harry, so far mueller hasn t moved on this demand that he wants trump to sit down in person. this negotiation has been going on since january that
clinton and don, jr. among others. and there is more. a federal judge is forcing a long-time aide to trump advisor roger stone to turnover documents and testify before a grand jury hearing, hearing evidence in the mueller investigation. stone sought damaging information about hillary clinton from wikileaks, the website which published thousands of hacked democratic e-mails, e-mails stolen by russian hackerses, hackers the trump justice department identified as agents of the russian government. there are also new developments in the trial of the president s former campaign manager, paul manafort s bookkeeper testifying that her boss was effectively broke and lying to banks about his precarious financial situation after losing his biggest client, which is the pro-russian former ukrainian president. and that was right about the same time that manafort started working for the trump campaign. the bookkeeper also testified that she knew nothing of foreign accounts controlled by manafort. t
If you pretended to solve the problem, then people walk around thinking the problem is solved but it s still there. that s what the trump administration is trying to do. they want to pretend they did something for instance, in kansas city there s pressure on emergency services because we didn t expand medicaid. a lot of people use the emergency room and don t have health care. that s a problem. but they re pretending to solve it. in a lot of ways that checking the box is more dangerous than doing nothing. steven, democrats call this junk insurance. among the shortcomings, they don t cover preexisting conditions. doesn t that leave out an enormous pool of people who won t be able to get coverage? well, look, what you and jason have been talking about actually would apply to obama care. jason, every promise that was made under obama care has turned out to have been a lie. preexisting conditions? i m talking about the fact that everyone would be covered. there s still 25 to 30 m
Here. they want to pretend they did something about the fact that, for instance, here in kansas city we have huge pressure on emergency services because, you know, we didn t expand medicaid in the state so a lot of folks don t have health care. they end up using the emergency room. that s a real problem. but they re pretending to solve it. in a lot of ways that check in the box, that s more dangerous than if they were to do nothing. let s bring in steven now. democrats called this junk insurance. that s what they say, that s a quote, junk insurance among the shortcomings, they don t cover preexisting conditions. doesn t that leave out an enormous pool of people who won t be able to get coverage? well, look, what you and jason have been talking about actually would apply to obamacare. i mean, jason, every promise that was made under obamacare has turned out to have been a lie. preexisting conditions? well, i m talking about the fact that everyone would be covered. there are stil