The Day After Tomorrow
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1:10:03
Breaking news from
the U.S.-Mexico border.

1:10:05
Just haIf an hour ago,
Mexican officiaIs cIosed the border. . .

1:10:09
. . .in the Iight of so many U.S. refugees
who are fIeeing south. . .

1:10:12
. . .in the wake of the approaching storm.
1:10:15
These people came in anticipation
of crossing into Mexico.

1:10:18
Instead, they've been met
with closed gates.

1:10:20
And now, in a dramatic reversal
of illegal immigration...

1:10:23
. . .thousands of peopIe are crossing
the Rio Grande into Mexico.

1:10:27
The scene unfolding here behind me
is one of desperation and frustration.

1:10:31
People have abandoned their cars,
grabbed their belongings...

1:10:34
...and they are wading across the river
illegally into Mexico.

1:10:41
Here it is.
1:10:44
This firepIace probabIy hasn't
been used in about 1 00 years.

1:10:50
AII right.
1:10:58
-What are you doing?
-What did you think we wouId burn?

1:11:01
-You can't burn books.
-No, absoIuteIy not.

1:11:04
You want to freeze to death?
1:11:08
I'II go get some more.
1:11:11
I'II heIp you.
1:11:12
I'm going with them.
1:11:16
Okay, do you have a cafeteria
or a Iunchroom?

1:11:18
Just an empIoyees' Iounge
with a few vending machines.

1:11:28
We're not gonna Iast Iong
on M&M's and potato chips.

1:11:31
What about the garbage cans?
1:11:33
There's aIways something
to eat in the garbage.

1:11:40
Friedrich Nietzsche?
We can't burn Nietzsche.

1:11:42
He was the most important thinker
of the 1 9th century.

1:11:45
PIease. He was a chauvinist pig
in Iove with his sister.

1:11:49
He was not a chauvinist pig.
1:11:51
But he was in Iove with his sister.
1:11:53
Excuse me? You guys?
1:11:54
Yeah, there's a whoIe section on tax Iaw
down here that we can burn.

1:11:59
After hours of uncertainty,
the traffic is now moving smoothly...


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