To try to forget about it. You have chosen to write a book, to dig deep into your memories of that chaos, that desperate time. Why? there are really two questions that people asked me when i got back from kabul in august 2021. One was, why did any of this happen? why did it happen after a 20 year campaign there, the expenditure of thousands of lives, the expenditure of trillions of dollars? how is it that this came to be back in the control of the taliban? the other question i was asked was just what was it like? what was the human element of this? what was it like dealing with desperate people trying to flee their country, you know, with their lives in a carrier bag? what was it like for the people on the ground? and what was it like for the soldiers who had invested so much for so little over that 20 years? you are very candid about the degree of trauma that you felt and that many of those around you felt. Would you say that, sitting here with me now, that trauma is still very real w
To move on, to try to forget about it. You have chosen to write a book, to dig deep into your memories of that chaos, that desperate time. Why? there are really two questions that people asked me when i got back from kabul in august 2021. One was, why did any of this happen? why did it happen after a 20 year campaign there, the expenditure of thousands of lives, the expenditure of trillions of dollars? how is it that this came to be back in the control of the taliban? the other question i was asked was just what was it like? what was the human element of this? what was it like dealing with desperate people trying to flee their country, you know, with their lives in a carrier bag? what was it like for the people on the ground? and what was it like for the soldiers who had invested so much for so little over that 20 years? you are very candid about the degree of trauma that you felt and that many of those around you felt. Would you say that, sitting here with me now, that trauma is still
Withdrawalfrom kabul. Many people would choose to move on, to try to forget about it. You have chosen to write a book, to dig deep into your memories of that chaos, that desperate time. Why? there are really two questions that people asked me when i got back from kabul in august 2021. One was, why did any of this happen? why did it happen after a 20 year campaign there, the expenditure of thousands of lives, the expenditure of trillions of dollars? how is it that this came to be back in the control of the taliban? the other question i was asked was just what was it like? what was the human element of this? what was it like dealing with desperate people trying to flee their country, you know, with their lives in a carrier bag? what was it like for the people on the ground? and what was it like for the soldiers who had invested so much for so little over that 20 years? you are very candid about the degree of trauma that you felt and that many of those around you felt. Would you say that,
who that will be. also, how long it will take to get her confirmed. the legal and political aspects of that. supreme court reporter ariane de vo vogue. there s an interesting two track thing. he stays until the end of the term but start the process now. right. well, for years, the process was usually between two to three months. there was the pick and then the vet and the nominee would go and visit with all the senators but all that changed, remember, with justice amy coney barrett. the republicans really pushed it, compressed it from announcement to confirmation. it was about 30 days. so you could see here the democrats moving very quickly. they could have hearings, they could even have a vote and then the president wouldn t sign off on the commission until after the term, right? when breyer has finished on the term. on the other hand, timing is interesting because this hearing is about a lot more than the nominee. first of all, it s going to be, as you said, the first afr
jesse: a famous man once said you dent know where you are going unless you know where you are going. and that famous man was me. so what we re going to do tonight is tell you where jesse watters primetime is going. before we do that let s talk about where we are now. the american people have run out of patience. and we are tired of being disrespected. ignorant, greedy leaders sold out our factories and pride to the chinese chinese communist for unpatriotic profits. deployments in iraq and afghanistan. wars shamefully mismanaged took a physical and mental tool. we were oversaturated with highly addictive pain killers while wall street blew up the economy and escaped with golden parachutes instead of prison stripes. six warriors divided us by race to distract us from the real division, class. as we erupted and tried to fix all of this, a steady diet of hopes and hatred was forced down our throat. the left row manhattan sized rage and resistance for four straight years. now