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tv   Charlie Rose  Bloomberg  December 30, 2015 7:00pm-8:01pm EST

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♪ >> that is the 31st of december. i have an update of top stories. couldate fund it restructure toshiba. toshibas unitsve in your structuring -- in your instruction. --shiba rows of the most rose the most in four months. china goes into the new year with a message for currency speculators, sources say the pos
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the has suspended for foreign breaks from trading in a crackdown on buying the currency on a discount bid news comes as -- discount. and one of the resource companies found a commodities slumped this year. speaking to bloomberg, john mack said that the growth engine will drive for rahman two euros -- raw materials in the long-term. glencore says their rating is key. is china going to stay with slow growth? >> what will happen in other is ifng markets, my view you have not been to china recently, go there. it has slowed down. but long-term it is a growth engine. >> and the chairman of china telecom has quit after being targeted in an official
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investigation. he stepped down on wednesday. the chief operating officer will take over until a new appointment is made. over the weekend, the government said that he was being questioned for severe violations of discipline. that is code for corruption. now we will leave you with a quick check of the markets. we have pretty much unchanged on the last trading day. new zealand markets are already closed. in the green category, this is the last trade of the year, finishing the session early. it has wrapped up in the year in new zealand, 13% gain this year. i will be back at the top of the next hour. ♪ from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. charlie: sebastian thurn is here
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conoco founder of identity, and online education company. he is a leader in robotics and electronics. he also taught computer science at stanford. value of thehe company was at $1 billion, making it a uniform. im pleased to have sebastian back at the table. welcome. >> who is this company for? people who want jobs. people who want to be in demand. we are try to find a separate pipeline. it can guarantee jobs. charlie: how do you do that. ? ? sebastian: you get a nano degree in a completely different kind of certificate. -- odd thing is it is drive
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a driven by industry. fact that for the this is leading as. so when they come out they will really be strong engineers. this separates you from most online courses? sebastian: there are fantastic companies out there. but we really focus on the drop aspects, drop placement. we drop them into various programs to see that they can get a guaranteed job. charlie: if they do not get a job, they get their tuition back? sebastian: yes. they can take two months, four months, whatever it takes to get a new skill. and most of the program is projects, you do things with your hands and build a portfolio. charlie: let me talk about one issue, encryption. explain to my audience with the debate is between silicon valley and law enforcement.
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is, of course,e messages that almost all messages are encrypted in a way that keeps the privacy of the message sent. there is a suspicion that law intocement has a backdoor encryption. and if they are able to read messages. it is unclear right now how much is being deciphered. complicated.s more the fbi director says there are some companies that encrypt and there is no backdoor. and they say, this is what apple says, that it is yet to be encrypted. we cannot even get in ourselves. you want us to go in the backdoor, we cannot do that. sebastian: it is an open and important question today, how
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much access should the government have? there are a lot of different opinions. sense i say, in the believe it is good for our current system to monitor activities and when something is found, to practically prevent bad guys from doing something very bad. there are increasing strong opinions saying that that is private. charlie: that is easy to understand, but how do you work this out is my question? sebastian: i think it is partially a policy issue, part a washington issue. charlie: so they will have to make a law? sebastian: yes. but it is congress that is supposed to make the best decisions for the people. charlie: everybody sees both ends, i think. most people understand the need for privacy and on the other hand, we live in a world in
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which we are worried about the spread of people who wish us ill. and we want to if we can, stop that. and i think the future will be different from the past. sebastian: it is hard to think of past examples. there is an enormous have a security threat. every year is different from the previous year, different things happening. and we have only seen the top of the iceberg. for companies that have been hacked, there are other companies that do not know they have been hacked. whothere are terrorists organize very different way from the past and the of social media to communicate in different ways . in cases like syria. and i think the type of security we need for the future is fundamentally different than what we had in the past. charlie: this is what i think i ind, that law enforcement paris has said that some of those terrorists, that made
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those attacks in paris killing all of those people, used at apps that were essentially encrypted. sebastian: yes. aboute: they have talked telegram. sebastian: that is an important question, to what extension government will have access to this. editing back to september 11, that was a long time ago, that data was available and had not been found. if we had found it would've been -- i do not think it will be the last one. there are more coming. in a think we should open this. for me, the agencies have an important purpose. it is important for the country. charlie: i will talk about artificial intelligence. i did a profile or a story on 60 minutes about this. where are we? sebastian: we are really far advanced. we have systems that can beat
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and outperform humans in tasks tasks,ay and tasks -- not monday and tasks, but complicated tasks. charlie: like what? sebastian: driving a car. flying a plane. pilots, if the weather is too bad, they can fly. i do not think the step toward account like that is far off. charlie: because they can --italized it -- digitalized digitalize it? sebastian: yes. we make and model of the brain trained with massive amounts of data. we had this 20 years ago, but we
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do not have enough data. and now we have this amazing amount of data and amazing machines that can do networks. charlie: data on everything? sebastian: data on everything. and every time we train something outcome gets better. we have two students who i asked this spring to train a visual recognizer for skin cancer. they found about 100,000 images online they could use and they trained it to recognize skin cancer. charlie: do a camera's eyes? sebastian: you take your phone out and you look at the skin and outcomes information. charlie: they have a database of they can say the us come of this is it -- they can say yes, this is it. sebastian: yes. charlie: so to be tested -- sebastian: they compare you and they can reveal it. so we ask a question, what is
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the best in the nation? charlie: what does he say about that? standpoint, but does he say that this is -- sebastian: it means we could bring dermatology expertise to anybody with a phone. it is at home. one of the main promises is you do not have to consult doctors. this is artificial intelligence. with this amount of data, a mission can't say much more data than a human being. it gives the ability to pass intelligence and it could surpass human intelligence. charlie: what is the timeline? sebastian: in driving, this already happened. google had a card team for many years -- car team for many years.
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in driving, an interesting thing happens, if a human driver makes a mistake, hopefully they will not make it again. in her about the driving, when a car makes a mistake, the carlin from it -- car learns from it, but so all the other cars on the planet. including all the unborn cars. that means, generically the learning speed for it to evolve out passes the ability of the human to evolve. no matter where you are in the evolution, the machines will take over. charlie: should we be frightened? sebastian: nope. we will find new things to do. technology enhances us and gives us new focuses on life. 100 years ago, from an equipment took over from us at a time when most of us were farming. and it was fine, because we
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found new jobs that did not exist. charlie: when people like elon musk say it causes them great concern, the extent of the development of artificial intelligence and they worry about it. what are they worried about? sebastian: i think that is pessimism. for me, that is lack of information to see what will happen next. if we go back and i show you the picture of a tractor and you are a farmer and i am a farmer, we are not worried about it. i see as great excitement. imagine the possibilities to have machines by our side. charlie: but who controls of the machines? sebastian: i is in humans will be smart enough -- assume humans will be smart enough to keep control. charlie: you have to build that end, don't you? sebastian: yes, you build it in with some sense.
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the dishwasher, if i push a button, it works. we can build machines like that. charlie: so how, what if the machine develops and ability that you cannot stop it? is that a problem? i am try to understand why so many prominent people in silicon valley want to say, be careful. at the least, be careful. sebastian: i do not quite see the negative scenario where machines and take over at all. we have a long history of amazing machines that have replaced components of what we do. like manufacturing or farming equipment. and you get to a point where we can enhance ourselves. charlie: to me, i cannot tell you what will happen because i do not know which jobs will be invented when the brains and memories are outsourced. sebastian: i think it will be a
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better life. charlie: is robotics and artificial intelligence the same thing? the capacity to create something, a machine, that can do things? sebastian: yes. robots are physical. they cost more. they break faster. but the underlying key thing in both cases is the software. to make something smart. so the masters of the future world are software writers? sebastian: i think so. and at some point when machines become smart enough, they will write their own software. charlie: this is amazing. you are a parent. sebastian: yes i am. old?ie: holt -- how sebastian: eight years old. charlie: have you talked -- taught him to code? sebastian: yes. he just started. charlie: because i was in
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silicon valley recently and somebody was talking about sending their child to the camp to learn to code. sebastian: it is like a second language. there are beautiful sides to it. you can code and it becomes like a visual game. instead of typing with your hands, you are moving blocks around. you are interacting. it is phenomenal. all the old stuff when i grew up, you had to do the code, wait 20 minutes. it was a task. charlie: are you teaching your child chinese? sebastian: chinese, no. i think that language will go away. can go to google translate and put in a linguist and outcomes the other language. -- that is it good that good right now? sebastian: i think so. and we make the same progress
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with voice recognition. it is quite amazing, when the accuracy surpasses 99%, it is amazing. charlie: that is amazing. sebastian: better than me. i have like 95%. charlie: you can go to any place in the world. pleasean say, you know, tell me what is at the opera tonight and the person who hears that will hear it in their language. sebastian: there is amazon echo. it is phenomenal. news.y, read me the what is the weather tonight? and you get an answer. as i said before, you have a self driving car, it goes faster than i can learn to drive. so amazon echo learns faster than a human can. wait another year or two and it will get better. charlie: and it is less than
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$100? sebastian: $150. --rlie: what the user for what do you use it for? everything. and i love the apple watch. charlie: why do you like it? sebastian: i like to read my text messages. read the news. charlie: and you can use it as a phone? sebastian: you can. statistics for apple. but they have done a phenomenal job. charlie: they have already started the next generation and the next generation. it is one of those things you know, it makes sense. and they will figure out a way. sebastian: the iphone took generations to improve. charlie: in terms of what it could do. right. notionhad to develop the
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that i really need this. sebastian: echo is a very visionary company. so. charlie: is there a difference between apple today without steve jobs? because he was sick as we know, he has been dead for four years, so the same people who surrounded him, tim cook as an example. tim cook was his hand-picked successor. it is the same company. unless you make the case that steve jobs can never be replaced and therefore we do not have steve jobs, but everybody who helped follow his vision. sebastian: no replacement for steve jobs. [indiscernible] sebastian: i have been really impressed by tim cook's ability to fuel this company. and everybody says this is an
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operation guy. he has no product division. i think he has proved this wrong. charlie: is that generally the feeling in silicon valley? sebastian: i think so. everybody admires what he is doing. charlie: in your view, this is the smartest people in the valley. sebastian: it is a great privilege to have the few friends i mean. page.y friend larry it is humbling to be there and to see the intellect and product vision. but i am also very fortunate i get the chance -- with our company for example, we are you what we learn from these fantastic leaders in education. charlie: this is what i want to understand. you say that you have friends that have twice your iq. you are one of the smart people in the valley. and you say that larry is twice your iq? sebastian: what i really admire
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is, elon musk is one of them, and a few others, they can really think logically about the future any way that is not compromising tradition. -- there is no reason why we should not have -- tomorrow. today we can go to mars. when you do the math and you ask the question, is it feasible? a lot of stuff is feasible. i believe only 1% of things have been invented yet. people do not buy it because people often have no imagination. go back to the past, from this coffee cup, to sewage, to the cameras mothers have been invented -- those have been invented in the last 50 years. forward and years take into consideration that the
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speed of invention is going up. we will see flying cars and other things. ♪
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♪ charlie: i know we are close on curing cancer. i have done enough conversations with people. with leading experts who believe it is within their vision. and they have based on what has been accomplished in the last several years. therapy is one example of how they are learning. and it is going beyond in -- just being disease specific. it is unbelievable. atastian: we looked back medicine. charlie: and this is the middle ages medicine. sebastian: this is not just treatment, this is also detection. so, take for example like what
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steve jobs had, this cancer. that cancer is specific because it is nonsense automatic -- non-symptomatic. and finally when a symptom appears, you have bone pain, it is too late. but if you image people every day at home, it could detect things long before they are big. we can use technology to find things that are so small. we can do that today. charlie: is it possible to develop sensors beyond a visual hearing,st like smell, and all the other senses that can look at a human and see if in fact they might have some disease they do not know about? sebastian: i mention finding skin cancer. with the camera. camera on your phone: that is one dollar a piece. for example, if i had a microphone on my cell phone and
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watch mice beach -- speech patterns, i am sure that you could find the onset of dementia or alzheimer's. your speech pattern changes when you have this. and a single snapshot -- doctors cannot find it because they do not know how we speak. i spent about half an hour a day on the phone with a phone can me justover time in for based on my personal speech pattern. it is something you could do tomorrow morning. charlie: this is all fascinating. say you went from google x two udacity. what is your next stop? sebastian: everybody asks me. it has become profitable, our next step will go in the direction of ipo and worldwide. there is a lot to do in that space. i believe the single most important thing to do right now is education because it is the gift that keeps on giving. if you teach a man how to fish,
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they have food for the rest of their life charlie:. and it is powerful in developed countries. sebastian: yes. charlie: it is the only ticket. sebastian: and we have an office in egypt. if you go there, you have little access. and we teach this in india. and you take india and china, this is about half the world population and they have about three universities in the top 100. charlie: my question for you is -- sebastian: we have work to do. charlie: obviously, you have done something to be proud of in learning and education, this is vital to how a society moves and progresses better but you talk with passion about medicine. you are obviously thinking about opportunities for someone who both understands the velocity of change in technology and has
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great curiosity about the human being and what opportunities that offers all of us. sebastian: i wish we could share all of that. i think this is a skill that is trained. before silicon valley, i was much less creative in thinking about the future. the examples i give you do not require new technology, they are on the shelf today. there is no magic in what i say. it is saying, look there is massive world problems that exist today and massive technology in just the past 10 years. but these two together and you can have a brainstorm and find what is amazing. charlie: here is my question. and i do not want you to include yourself in this. i would love to do the following. it happened at different companies, i know. i would love to be up to every month -- able to, every month,
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bring together 5-10 men and women and sit down with them and have them deep think about what ,t is they think we need to what bill gates would say, iq on. and meet every month and make sure that take larry, who understands the role of the corporation and his own vision of the role of the corporation. he has that deeply. sebastian: and is logical. charlie: and he understands the resources that are the. i would like to have a meeting every month and jesse. sebastian: i have the great access to have any good to larry page and we spent a lot of time on questions like this. i feel like a schoolboy, to be honest. it is great to see how his mind constructs so fast. every time i talk to elon musk,
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i am blown away. what comes out -- charlie: and bill gates is doing the same thing in terms of health. extraordinary. sebastian: i am game to join you every month and come to new york. charlie: i am thinking about it. sebastian: do it. charlie: we can sit around the table and think about big ideas. from around the world, not just silicon valley or austin, texas, but around the world. sebastian: it is like the wild west. it is far from washington dc, you do not think in regulatory terms, you think about was possible. and think about all the past rules. we do not take things from granted -- for granted. i come from a country that is much older, german thinking is by and large, much more ok, it ought to be perfect. going talk about universities and i talked to professors, it
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has to be the classroom, have to be this way. and i asked the question, does it really? maybe it does, but in most cases it does not. what we have is this a left over from the nontechnological past. and we are moving in a much more sophisticated way. and -- charlie: how far off is that? sebastian: it is not far off. we have this idea that google x. to surgeryetch to go -- but this technology has made enormous progress. we have input and output. we have our keyboard, our mouse, our notes, they are relatively slow. the reason we cannot look at 100 webpages, we cannot focus as fast.
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charlie: tell me who else should be a my table. ebastian: [indiscernible] from uber. charlie: are they still primarily somehow tied it to a university? sebastian: i think society thinks this way. universities are such a big thing and important thing. identity, aple lifetime identity. if you graduate from harvard or yell, you'll always be a harvard oreo graduate. the thing we address at udacity is a thing people cannot get there. inthe people who grew up india or china, who have no chance or no access. we sometimes forget that we marvel about an i.t. and
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harvard, but we forget, even for american students, 80% go into nonselective universities with graduation rate of 50%. so for most of american youth, the university half is a bad one. half of them do not graduate, they have anonymous debt that will last -- enormous debt that will last a lifetime. maybe $100re charged a month, because for some degrees, we even give you a job. tuition should never be more than $1000 a year. charlie: imagine that. sebastian: and i really believe it is working. we have many things to prove. we have many problems that remain. but we graduate more than 1000 people who have found jobs and
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did they are really strong. and the shift careers. and you come to us afterwards and you are in demand. charlie: this is something that was said to me recently, what is the secret of the silicon valley? ups.sual answer is a start you have entrepreneurial talent, tech companies, tech universities, venture capital and he makes that up and here you go. the thing is, start ups are a necessary component of a but the secret, and very few people talk wholeit, is there is a skill set and talent network so how do you get that global school fast? sebastian: i am going to quote, basically if you take google and the number of people, you will not do twice the amount but true for manys is
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companies, not singling out google. if you take start of and double the number of people in startups, you twice as number started, you'll get twice as many products. charlie: so doubling the number of startups, not doubling the number of people at startups. sebastian: yes. you have 2000 startups, you get 2000 part of -- products. twice as many people, twice the activity. why is that? in big organizations, most people spend most time in meetings. so the coordination efforts go up. and more creative energy gets going -- i just spent the last two days in banks in meetings. with it startups, you barely have a meeting parity but all that creativity into products. not coordinating is good, it
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makes it independent, it makes it fears. the moment you are in a big organization, it is much easier to have a meeting, a committee -- charlie: more spots but it. -- responsibility. sebastian: if you take a big companies and cut them into smaller company's, there'll be more activity. you applause what they did in terms of organizing an apple? sebastian: yes. is a large set of products, like google does, having coordination difficulties. any of you or would -- in the viewer would process -- protest, it is, looking at. it is the logic of chance. charlie: that is the way that i
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thought problems coming up. rather than trying to sort of solve everything at one time. sebastian: good people do that. charlie: so let me go back to deep mind. exactly what is it? sebastian: it is a learning program. it was able to learn by itself in deep learning how to learn and play video games. the interesting thing about video games, not just a recognition thing. like i mentioned the example of screening skin cancer. this is an interactive thing, but you have to learning policy. the different sets, deep mind did not just learn one, a learned many. it was smart enough to pick up video games. so google bought it because it is amazing. and another year, we made it even more complicated. charlie: great to see you. sebastian: good to see you
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charlie. charlie: sebastian thrun. we will be right back. ♪
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♪ charlie: senator cory gardner of colorado is a start of a large republican class that entered the senate after the 2014 elections. we spoke to him in january about his expectations and hopes. >> we had another conversation
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midway through the year. now as congress has adjourned, we conclude with the junior senator from colorado. thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> you said your hope was that republicans could prove that they could govern responsibly and maturely, have you achieved that? >> i think we have. it has not necessarily been pretty at times, but there have been achievements put in place. the long-term highway though. the first time in 17 years that has been done. an overhaul of education reform. the first time in nearly a decade that all 12 appropriation bills have come out. they have to not just get out of committee, but get off the floor and to the president. >> we will talk about dominance -- on the abyss -- omnibus bill any moment. >> there has been that throw
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down and getting the peoples worked on. there is a moment where we have a distraction that gets in the way of washington. but we need to say, enough is enough and we need to buckle down and get worked up whether that is the appropriations process or the difficult time to pass in the human trafficking bill, do not need to take as long as it did. host: the big bill you did at the end. what some observers say is that andcrats got spending republicans -- >> i think if you look at the budget, we passed a balanced budget for the first time since 2001. the budget in itself does not dictate whether there will be savings. has to do andess with the senate and house have to do is put in place a deficit.
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host: what about the bill you just past? if you are a grass-roots republican and you know those people, you are going to reduce the deficit, cut tax rates, you are going to repeal obama care and stop other things and none of that was achieved. >> if you look at how we have reduced discretionary spending, not mandatory spending, that is a whole other entitlement we need to address giveaway have reduced -- adjust. but we have reduced discretionary spending. there are a number of programs we reduced. and we put this on the desk for the first time, a repeal of the affordable care act. so we have been able to do those things and be able to have successes and it shows the importance of winning the white house in 2016 to finish the job. host: you have said to me twice that it is not enough to be
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negative. you have yet to come up with an alternative. >> i disagree with that. if you look at the king versus burwell decision that was issued the summer, there were a number of republicans who came forward with ideas to replace obama care. if you look at ideas about coming up with a solution or talking about the replacement of bill cassidy. host: there are ideas and there are things in this bill that repeal tax measures. but at some point, it has been five years, here is this, not just bill cassidy, but here is a republican alternative. >> i would like this he votes on them. but they were introduced. these are bills you can go read the legislative language, cosponsored them, see who is on the impaired we can vote on them. we should. just like we voted to repeal the
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affordable care act for her but over the next several years hopefully we will have a different direction from the white house and we will be looking repeal the affordable care act and put something in its place. host: sometime over the next election? >> it will be difficult to get through. host: you think rush limbaugh has it wrong and the gop sells america down the river? >> i think if you look at the bill, the tax cuts for the american people, certainly a business investment. this is an important step that will create economic growth for the american people. i think there are things we need to adjust over the next year and two years particularly when we have a new leader in the white house who we have committed to debt reduction, working with congress on a balanced budget, that will actually do the job. host: you are convinced secretary clinton is committed to that? >> i think we will have a better
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opportunity than senator clinton . host: you have proposed sanctions against the korean dictator, both people that -- but most people would say to tackle this area we need to work with china. ,nd yet, i saw carly fiorina she said hammer china on the south sea, hammer china, all of which is justified. but you cannot hammer on everything and get them to work on you -- work with your something else. >> you are right. china has tremendous leverage over north korea and they have not exercised that leverage. the bulk of north korea's economy is dependent on china, so there is far more they could be doing to step up against what i have turned -- termed the forgotten maniac. how can we do that? we need to engage better the
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triple alliance, the three of us , japan, south korea and the united dates, coming together -- states, coming together to put pressure on china to work on north korea. to face north korea, to make them stand down on their nuclear program and end human rights atrocities. the only way to do this is raised strong alliances. there are challenges. host: but you want china to be part of it. >> we believe they can be further engaged. host: which means dealing with china in those other issues must be more delicate. >> many to realize that as it rises in power and a emerges as a global power, they cannot continue with behavior that is unbecoming of a great power. host: i thought that you were age of bush person -- you were
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a jeb bush person, but you are now endorsing marco rubio. >> i believe it will become the next president of the nicest. but i was tired of answering this question, people would ask who you think will win the nomination? somebody here is optimistic, who has a plan for the future, and they said, you are supporting marco rubio? and i would say, no, i have not given an endorsement yet. but i think he is the person with the right policies to move this country forward, whether it is foreign policy, economic policy. this is an important direction for the country. , he: on foreign relations proposes what he says is a much more robust policy to defeat isis. josh rogan says what he is
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proposing is intensification of what obama is already doing and what hillary clinton proposes. >> if you listen to what marco rubio is talking about, this administers and is not -- administration is not pursuing that. they are doubling down on policies -- what we are doing for streamlining and to the approval process that has arms notin 3/5 of our able to deliver on a target. and that is up from a couple of months ago, this is only the past weeks we have seen this increase. talking about, in congress we have been talking about this idea of a safe zone. a humanitarian zone. that is not something the president is considering pair but if we will address this issue of refugees from syria. if we want to get to the bottom of that, it is not about how
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many millions of people the world will take end, this is about syria and ending the disaster in syria. and that will take a new direction from this president and i believe we are here in this mess because of hillary clinton's foreign policies and i do not think she can create a whole new direction. that assad has to go? >> yes. host: those countries where we got rid of these dictators, they are now more chaotic than they were before. >> i do not think that is a fair comparison, particularly if you look at iraq is what happened, there was a direction made to really build up our success and a political campaign occurred, a promise of withdraw was announced. -- whenof a sudden
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president obama made a commitment to pull out. they moved forward with the , and hed allowed understood the importance of injuring an agreement that would allow us to continue to go forward with a presence necessary to provide security and training in iraq. host: look at libya, it is a terrorist haven. i guess the overall point is assad, why do we think that syria will look better than iraq or libya? >> he is terrible. isis is certainly somebody that cannot take leadership, that is why we need to destroy isis and that is why what is happening right now with the direction of this president is not for -- -- : we like an american
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>> i think we need 65 nations and more -- is indifferent than what iraq? >> i think we need a major that we end the civil war and do not sad-like regime that is not kill its own people and -- to the make sure syrian people so that they cannot face consequences of death. host: i tried very hard to pin you down on donald trump. and you very artfully made it hard in many ways. i will ask you again. this is no longer just one month or two months, he for six months has led. and he is about 20 points ahead of everybody. he is going to stay for a while.
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how much is he hurting the party? >> i think his policies are dead wrong. the idea we would create a religious test for entry into the country is absolutely wrong. in fact, i find it interesting that there are some people who would agree with this and would allow president obama to create this and enforce it. they would not like this idea. but that is what he is offering. i made that clear. it is very clear to more and more, each day, that there are others who could do a better job of representing this country as president. you see that in the numbers others are experiencing. marco rubio's rise. and i think people -- host: trump does not drop. >> i think you'll see him starting to spread his supporters to others in the race. host: is he hurting the party? >> i think when you present a
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message of hate, you'll have an impact. i think the democrat party wants somebody with fresh ideas, but those ideas cannot make it look like you are opposed to good people. policies that are hasd on bad policy, like he proposed, can make it look like you are against people and that is not good for any party. host: during your campaign in 2014, you reached out to latinos and he talked to me in january saying we need to do something constructive on immigration. it looks like this environment, rump and to travel -- t other factors, it looks like something needs to change. but now it seems like it has vanished. >> it has changed dramatically.
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you have this coming from different candidates. it has changed dramatically because of global developments, whether that is central america and the crisis of the children we have seen over the past years and the inflow from central america into the united states. host: but there are fewer people come across the board. >> some people have said we have seen a decrease from mexico or however you want to see it. show,k that the studies it is also about refugee situations, concerns about who is coming into the country, proper background to make sure that people are safe. questions about the visa waiver program. this hasn't changed the debate on immigration -- this has
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changed the debate on immigration and it is being lumped together, so it is a challenging thing to a conflict. host: you worry about donald trump, how about ted cruz, do you worry about him? >> i think he is intelligent and talented. i think he has a lot of different policies than donald trump on but i think the best person to lead our party and share values of our party is marco rubio. host: that brings me to a very respected columnist and analyst who flirted with the idea last month that the perfect running mate for marco rubio would be cory gardner. i know what you will say. he will say it is silly. yet, you think of the parallel, bill clinton and al gore, both in their 40's, both from the same region, with net -- woul
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dn't a marco rubio and cory gardner ticket be exciting? comment,k i made the the article said something about a short list, and what i meant to say was i was the only person as short as marco rubio. so, it would be in carbonic -- incredible honor to serve the country and i think that marco rubio will be a great president of the state and it will support him throughout this effort. whatever i am called upon to do, i will do. but my first obligation is to the state of colorado. assuring. than we will see what happens. you are convinced marco rubio will be the nominee? >> i am. and as the months unfold, whether it is new hampshire, iowa, the other primaries, i
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towarde people gravitate marco rubio. he is currently leading in colorado. and we see that reflected nationwide, he is one of the only one or two that can win nationwide and being the nominee, hillary clinton. ,ost: when you were sworn in your grandmother inadvertently told joe biden that she was too busy to talk because she was watching you being sworn in. have they had communication since then? >> what people do not know is a couple months later, i think -- thanked the vice president for calling her. and he said, let's call her again. phone, they had a
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great conversation. i am glad the joe biden is not running for president because i think that my grandmother would be a voter. host: happy holidays. thank you for joining us. and thank you for joining us. ♪
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it is thursday, i am angie in hong kong with a story this new year's eve. china goes into the new year with currency speculation, the free lunch is over. sources say the pcb has suspended banks, and a crackdown in buying the currency at a discount and selling it later in shanghai. it felt to a five-year low, but later recovered. the chairman of china's telecom has quit, after being targeted in investigation. the president and chief operating officer will take

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