• last month
Hundreds of people are still unaccounted for across several southeastern US states in the wake of Hurricane Helene. As the death toll rises, President Joe Biden is set to travel to storm-ravaged North Carolina on October 2. His trip comes hot on heels of Trump's visit to Georgia, another epicenter of the destruction.
Transcript
00:00Working together, we'll overcome these hardships, we'll endure, we will rebuild Valdosta and
00:29every other town that has been so badly hit, and we'll emerge stronger, more united and
00:35more prosperous than ever before.
00:38You're going to be stronger, better, you're going to learn a lot from it, and again, we
00:42pray to God for those that have been so badly injured and for, in particular, for the people
00:48that are no longer with us, and God bless everybody.
01:00Hello, folks.
01:03Good morning.
01:04To state the obvious, over the weekend, with devastating storms in the south, we're not
01:10leaving until the job is done.
01:12I also want you to know, I'm committed to traveling to the impacted areas as soon as
01:16possible, but I've been told that it would be disruptive if I did it right now.
01:29I look at them bricks that fell off that wall, and it reminds me of our country, how
01:40it was built up brick by brick by brick, and this past administration has absolutely blowed
01:45the walls off of it.
01:47In record inflation, crime high, the border's wide open.
01:51We need somebody that's going to build that wall back.

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