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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  September 15, 2011 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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precisely when people were ordering it on amazon is when the earthquake hit. there's me joking about a disaster what i accused michele bachmann of it. >> penn jillette, the book is "god, no!" thanks for joining us. you can have the last word online at thelastword@msnbc.com. follow my tweets @lawrence. the rachel maddow show is up next with her exclusive interview with senate candidate elizabeth warren. good evening, rachel. thank you, lawrence. i've been so prepared for this interview that i overprepared. it could be a catastrophe. it should be fun. thank you at home for staying with us for the next hour. >> as always, i rely on gale's love and support and that of our two lovely daughters. i want to thank ayla and arianna for their help as well.
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just in case anybody is watching throughout the country, yes, they're both available. no, no, no. no. only kidding. only kidding. only kidding. only kidding. arianna definitely is not available. ayla is. this is arianna. this is ayla. oh, i can see i'm going to get in trouble when i get home. >> you know, massachusetts is an old state. massachusetts has been a state since 1788.
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massachusetts is so old it's not even a state. it's a commonwealth. when the pilgrims landed in america they landed at plymouth rock in massachusetts. massachusetts has the world's oldest functioning written constitution. that's massachusetts. it's old. by the time we got around to forming a congress in this country and sending people to it, massachusetts had a delegation of ten members, eight in the house and two, of course, in the senate. and the 223 years that massachusetts has existed as a state, i mean commonwealth, massachusetts has sent 465 people to congress, i think. that's what i was able to figure out today. of those 465 people, a grand total of four of them have been women. that's it. four women in the entire history of massachusetts sent to congress. 461 men, 4 women. in the special election to replace democratic senator ted kennedy, democrats did choose a
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woman in 2010, martha coakley, as their nominee, but as you saw, and to the great momentary embarrassment of his daughters, scott brown did end up winning that night. since scott brown was elected to the united states senate, he has mostly followed the wise counsel that lots of new senators get which is to keep your head down, try not to make too much noise or too much news. we've been asking for interviews with senator brown for more than a year at this show when we frankly have not gotten anywhere with those requests. it's not just us. the most press senator brown has done in the time he's been a senator has been to promote his glossy autobiography. that's been the most of the press he's gotten. when he has been forced to weigh in on national political issues, it has sometimes been a little weird in the sense that it has been hard to follow his positions sometimes. he doesn't always seem to have a great grasp of either the policy issues he is talking about or in some cases, which is the weird part of it, he does not have a good grasp of what his own position is on those issues.
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take, for example, the paul ryan republican kill medicare budget. when the paul ryan budget was heading toward a vote in the senate in may, senator brown told an audience in massachusetts, quote, the leaders will bring forward paul ryan's budget and i will vote for it. i will vote for it. that's what he said. a few days after saying that, staffers for senator brown explained that that statement, i will vote for it, was not in fact a statement about how the senator would vote on that legislation. it was just a statement that he would vote on it. he was talking about having the opportunity to vote on that bill even though what he explicitly said was, i will vote for it. ultimately after saying, yes, he wanted to vote for the paul ryan plan to kill medicare and after that his staffers say they didn't know whether or not he wanted to vote on it to kill medicare, he settled on a no vote. it was yes then i have no idea, ignore what i said then it was no all in the span of ten days.
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that's been sort of what it's like talking to scott brown about national issues when he is willing to talk about them, even though mostly he's just not willing to talk. the single most distinguishing factor about scott brown's tenure in the senate thus far has been more unexpected than that. not seen as a big massachusetts issue necessarily. not what he campaigned on. most people who supported him or did not support him did not expect it of him when he went to the senate. in the 19 months he has been in washington, scott brown has emerged as arguably the most wall street of all 100 u.s. senators. i don't mean that in a stylistic way or a critical way. i just mean it in terms of the math. out of all 100 u.s. senators, scott brown ranks number one right now in campaign contributions, campaign contributors from hedge funds. scott brown is also the senator who has received the most campaign money from the venture capital industry. scott brown is number two among all u.s. senators in receiving
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money from private equity and investment firms. he's also number two in money from the securities and investment industry. look at his top campaign contributors right now. fidelity, that's listed fmr corp. goldman sachs, bank of new york melon. scott brown has taken so much money in from wall street in the short time in washington that "forbes" magazine last year put him under the headline "wall street's favorite congressman." we maybe should have seen this coming. maybe wall street and scott brown knew something nobody else did before he was elected. in the six days before his special election victory last year, scott brown in six days took in nearly half a million dollars from the financial industry. the return on wall street's investment, the payoff they have gotten on what they have spent on scott brown, is the kind of margin that makes wall street guys drool on to their tasselled loafers. as the wall street reform bill was being crafted in the senate it was scott brown who saved wall street firms $19 billion
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that they would have otherwise paid back to the taxpayers. he stripped out a fee that was included in that bill that was meant to have the guys who broke the financial system pay to fix it so that taxpayers didn't have to bear the whole burden. wall street's investment in scott brown really paid off. think about that. $19 billion they didn't have to pay because of him specifically. and even though scott brown is not facing re-election until 2012, the gratitude of wall street for what the bank of scott brown has done for them in the u.s. senate is a major reason why he is sitting right now on nearly $10 million in campaign contributions. already. even now many quarters out from this election in 2012, his later fund-raising figures show he's raising hundreds of thousands of dollars from the financial industry every quarter. now, even before he has technically started running for re-election. if you want to know why the stock market has been all over the place recently, everybody's been sort of trying to peg things going on in american politics to what's going on with
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these giant swings in the stock market right now, people trying to make those connections i think are doing so at their own pearl peril. the reason the stock market is swinging and going nuts is because what's going on in europe. europe is starting to look like how the united states looked three years ago at this time. at this time exactly three years ago the u.s. financial system was beginning to collapse. at the end of the george w. bush administration. that is what caused the great recession here. we had the controversial bank bailout to stop us from going into an immediate great depression at that time. the damage done to us by the wall street collapse, the collapse of the financial system of wall street firms is what put us into the mess we're still unable to get out of. the determinative thing in american life and american politics that is clouding out everything else going on, all other political activity, frankly, all other factors is this economy, right? this economy still not recovered from the wall street collapse. the wall street collapse that
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wall street brought on itself by its own behavior and that we are all still paying for. and so this is an open question. i think this is an open question. i do not know the answer. does an electorate angry about the economy chiefly motivated by anxiety about the economy and wanting the economy to get better, does that electorate want wall street's favorite to be their senator? is anger about what happened to the economy at all directed toward wall street which is where this problem came from? or have republicans succeeded in redirecting anger about the economy on to washington? and specifically on to democrats? and on to the obama administration that has tried to drag us out of the pit that wall street threw us in with frankly not enough success to make anybody feel good about it? the person who led the charge for wall street reform, the person whose signature washington achievement is a new agency to protect individuals and families and regular people from conniving ways that wall street wants to cheat us, that person is elizabeth warren. elizabeth warren has just entered the race to run against scott brown for the united states senate in massachusetts.
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joining us for her first national interview since announcing her candidacy today in massachusetts is elizabeth warren. miss warren, thank you very much for coming back on the show. congratulations on your announcement announcement. >> thank you very much. thank you for inviting me here. >> there are have been rumors swirling around for months you were thinking about jumping into the race. what was the deciding factor that made you say i need to do this? >> it was getting out and talking to families all around in massachusetts. families who said we're in real trouble here and we need someone who's going to talk about these issues. and so after i talked lots and lots of families here in the commonwealth, i decided that this was the right thing to do. and that's why i'm doing it. i'm out here to speak for middle class families and i'm out here to be part of the families who are going to start pushing back. >> i know that you were out today on your announcement day for 12 hours today meeting people across massachusetts. i want to quote to you one of
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the people who you spoke to, a 25-year-old woman later said this to a reporter. she said, she told me she really wanted to fight for the middle class that they've been hammered on for a very long time and if things didn't start to change we'd be in big trouble. i'm not sure if any one candidate is able to turn things around for an entire group of people especially with the way things are in washington right now. what's your response to that young woman who you met today? how do you overcome that hopelessness about d.c. that exists among so many people right now? >> you know, i've been told a lot of times about what's not possible. i grew up in pretty tough circumstances and i fought all my life for everything i've gotten to do. i was told when i was down in washington we couldn't have a consumer financial protection bureau and the reason was because the largest lobbying force ever assembled on the face of the earth have said no, they said they'll kill it, they said it won't happen. you know, my view on that just meant then you stand up and you push harder. you push back.
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you don't step down. now, we're talking about the whole future of the middle class. i mean, things are really tough out there. and my view on this is that means we just have to fight back. i am not giving up on this. i am ready to take this fight all the way to the floor of the united states senate. >> scott brown's campaign has already bought a derisive web address to use against you. queenelizabethwarren.com, which i don't exactly know what that means. i guess they're trying to portray you as a rich person or representing rich people or maybe being a foreign person? i don't know. what are you anticipating about how your opponents -- you've talked about the opponents you faced in your fight for the middle class in the past. what to you anticipate from how your political opponents will run against you? >> you know, i don't know. let the name calling begin. it's obviously already started. but i faced off against the
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largest banks on wall street who said, look, this is how it's going to be. and i pushed back and i didn't step down and i'm not going to step down here. i grew up -- look, i started baby sitting at 9. i started waiting tables at 13. i got married at 19. i graduated from a public university. started teaching elementary school. my family didn't have much of anything but i grew up in an america that invested in me. and that's how i got to do a lot of things. but what i mostly got to do is i got to keep fighting for families like mine. and that's now what i want to keep on going. you know, there was a time -- we came out of the great depression. we wrote a set of economic rules and we spent 50 years growing america's middle class. making it stronger, making it more vibrant. every generation said, my kids are going to do better than i did.
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and starting about 30 years ago we really lost our way on that. so that now we are in a place where middle class families have just been hammered for a generation. it's not just what has happened in the last few years. it's been going on now for a long time. and it's the case that nobody seems to get this. nobody in washington. washington has been wired now for the big institutions. for those who can hire an army of lobbyists. it's not working for middle class families. and that's what i care about. that's why i'm going step up on this one. why i'm ready to fight back. >> it is washington wired as you say, for those interests because washington has been bought. i mean, we've always had a problem of big money and lobbyist influence in washington, but with the roberts court, we have seen those forces really unleashed in terms of unlimited campaign donations and anonymous campaign donations if you're fortunate enough to get
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the democratic nomination. scott brown is already sitting on $10 million, a huge proportion of it from the forces you have been fighting. how to do you compete with that? >> you know, i'll put it this way. i can be outspent but i can't be outworked. i'm getting out there. i was, today i was all across the state. i met with people -- it was like meeting with family. all the way throughout massachusetts. thousands of people have come to the website, elizabethwarren.com and they've said, i want to be part of this. and that's what i really think this is about. this isn't going to be just about me and this isn't going to be just about money. this is going to be about a lot of people pulling together and making some change. some change that they -- that we really need. >> one of your main opponents for the democratic nomination is the mayor of newton, massachusetts, warren. he has experience in government in massachusetts. as a mayor. you don't have experience as an elected official. do you see that as a disadvantage for you, something you have to explain to voters? >> all i can say to voters
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across the state of massachusetts, i've been working on this set of issues pretty much all of my life. i've been out there taking on special interests and i've stood up against them. and that the end of the day, we're now going into an election, i'm willing to get out there and work my heart out for this. this is something i want to do because i think it's the right thing to do. and i'll be there day in and day out working. it's all i can do. i can offer what i am and what i've done and that's -- that's it. i'm going to work for this. >> elizabeth warren, democratic candidate for the united states senate in massachusetts. as of today. thank you for making the decision to be with us tonight on your announcement day. i know that's a hard decision to make. i really appreciate your generosity with that. good luck to you. >> thank you. all right. best new thing in the world is coming up at the end of the show tonight. also richard engel will be joining us in studio just tonight. we have a big show tonight. ugh, my feet are killin' me.
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going to be able to get white people to vote for him. remember that theory? about being bad at bowling meant no white electorate would vote for him then he wins idaho and nebraska and everybody remembers, hey, didn't he win iowa, too? he is in fact bad at bowling. we learned that in march '08 when candidate obama went to this bowling alley and got size 12 shoes. in the election, president obama, ultimately the man who would become president obama, won pennsylvania, won by more than ten points in pennsylvania. he did not win in blair county where he went bowling. he lost by 24 points in blair county. he still did win the state as democratic presidential candidates have been doing in pennsylvania for almost 20 years now. that won him 21 electorate votes over john mccain. you need 270 total. pennsylvania gave him 21 of those. republicans now control both houses of the state legislature
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and governorship in pennsylvania. they have just proposed a change so that if barack obama performs the same way in the next election as he did in '08, he would not get 21 electoral votes like he did last time or 20 which is how many pennsylvania will get this time around. if barack obama does in pennsylvania what he did the last time, this time he would get a net gain of maybe one electoral vote. under a new set of rule the republicans are considering. even if he wins the state, they might just give the republican nominee more electoral votes anyway. nice, right? the republican plan is to stop awarding all of pennsylvania's electoral votes to whoever wins the state's vote overall and instead to award most of them district by congressional district. in 2008, barack obama won the state by more than ten points. if you look at the map district by district, if you squint at it, it looks like john mccain might have won. john mccain did win more congressional districts in the race. he won 10 out of the 19.
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he was able to pick up the republican areas of the state, as you'd expect, places like blair county, home of that bowling alley. he won his districts by smaller margins. so mccain lost the popular vote statewide by a lot. pennsylvania republicans think it's going to go like that again in their state in 2012. the republican narrowly carrying a bunch of republican districts but losing the whole state. in this new plan being considered by the republican controlled lecture with support from the republican governor which means it very well could become law, in this new plan a re replay of the 08 sts presidential race in pennsylvania with the new plan in place would mean the republican nominee with the ten districts john mccain won would be winning ten electorate votes. barack obama with his nine districts would win nine electorate votes plus two bonus electorate votes for winning the state's overall popular vote. so president obama's overall net gain from this pennsylvania win would not be 21 electorate votes like it was in '08, it would be one electorate vote. barack obama would get 11.
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john mccain would again ten. that's what barack obama would get for trouncing the republican nominee in pennsylvania by more than ten points like he did last time. he'd get one net electorate vote. so by persuading no more people, by winning no more votes, by winning no more congressional districts than they did the last time, republicans in pennsylvania might have just figured out a way to add 20 electoral votes to the republican side of the margin in the next presidential race. not by getting anymore votes. not by persuading anymore people. just by changing pennsylvania's rules. so they would benefit the republican candidate. this is how republicans in the states rule this year. this is what they're doing with control of the state legislatures and the governorships. unions give money to democratic candidates and do get out the vote for democratic candidates then unions have to be destroyed by state law. democrats count on newly registered voters turning out for democratic candidates, it must become much, much harder to newly register voters. democratic voters are disproportionately minorities
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and students who don't have official photo i.d. then official photo i.d. will be required to vote by state law. now in pennsylvania, republicans can't figure out how to win the state but they can figure out how to narrowly win some districts. then, by golly, they'll change that state law, too. this is called using public policy for partisan outcomes. this is called putting your thumb on the scale. joining us now is former pennsylvania governor ed rendell, former chair of the democratic party and now a msnbc political analyst. governor, thank you for being here. it's nice to see you. >> nice to be here. >> let me just ask you what your position is on this new plan in your state, this republican plan to divide up the state's electoral votes. >> really, rachel, it's shameful. it's absolutely shameful. first of all, it violates the spirit if not the letter of one person, one vote. think about it. in philadelphia, which is a city that's about 83% democratic registration, let's say the vote
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follows registration. well, philadelphia, barack obama would carry 83-17. that secondly, it is bad for pennsylvania. right now as you know, rachel, pennsylvania's one of the big three. florida, pennsylvania, and ohio where elections are decided. we get the most money spent during the election campaign, the most attention from the candidates and the campaigns. and year in and year out, month in and month out, we have a lot of clout down in washington.
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people don't want to truck with pennsylvania but of its power in an election. why should we unilaterally disarm? why should ohio, with a republican governor, ohio keeps all of its, let's say, 19 electoral votes going to the winner and keeps its clout. a rout in pennsylvania would be something like 11-7. so we pick up four electorate votes. that would be the whole ball of wax. no one would pay nearly as much attention to pennsylvania as they did now. lastly, it's blatantly political. if you're going to do this in pennsylvania and the republicans are going to pick up electorate votes, what about texas? we'd like to pick up electorate votes in texas. if you did it by district in texas instead of getting shut out, democrats would gain electorate votes. it's silly, it's partisan, it's unfair. they should be ashamed of themselves. >> one of the sort of internal dynamics at work here, politico.com reported on this
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legislature are actually against this. because they think it will make it harder for some republicans to get re-elected if national democrats are competing more all over the state in republican areas. are you seeing republican resistance to this, too, or are republicans most onboard? >> no, i think there's nervousness on the republican side president they're in pretty good shape in the legislature. they're pretty hesitant to screw with the status quo. you know, politics begins at home, number one. so -- it might not pass. and we're going to have an all-out assault against it. particularly in the southeast. we're going to make voters understand the unfairness of it and i think it might not pass. but you know what would be delicious irony? if let's say mitt romney's their candidate. he carries pennsylvania. but barack obama comes in very close and gets, let's say, nine of pennsylvania's 20 electoral votes and barack obama becomes president by five electorate votes. wouldn't that be nice? wouldn't that be nice? >> it would be nice.
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>> be careful what you wish for. >> be careful what you wish for, but you have to enjoy being the person who likes watching the funny movie "over the edge of the abyss" and be willing to get that close to it. >> it's shameful, not fair, undemocratic and we should put it aside fast. >> former pennsylvania governor ed rendell. thanks for joining us. >> my pleasure. >> thanks. carmageddon is what they called it when they shut down a freeway in los angeles this summer. remember that? it was going to be the worst thing ever. it turned out to be fine. the best new thing in the world today is a comprehensive upgrade on everything about carmageddon including the name and the merchandise. please stay tuned for that.
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tonight we had the first national interview with elizabeth warren since she's announced she's running for the united states senate against scott brown. very excited to have had that. tonight is a big show. we also have next an exclusive scoop from wire.com about something apparently crossing over from far right conspiracy theory world to the fbi. breaking exclusively here. that story is next.
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major republican events now. read their own coverage of their continuing birther crusade at their website today under their exclusive expose that president obama's social security number has been revealed as a fake. and that's right under their crack reporting on how they have proven by definition being a liberal means you are mentally ill. "world net daily" is still around, making a buck off the more gullible elements of the conservative base for quite some time. they've been around a long time before they got on to the birther thing. they've been on the conspiratorial ragged edge of the right wing. in 2006, their crusade was the u.s. military would never succeed in post-9/11 war unless we treated those wars as more of an actual crusade. here's a "world net daily" interview with a counterterrorism expert in 2006 who told them, "mohammed's mindset is a source for terrorism. it's not terrorism that is
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beleaguering the united states, it's islamic values. islamic values, being an islam, that's a threat. since the prophet, himself, the mindset is a source for terrorism. that's the kind of stuff "world net daily" was pitching before they were pitching the birth certificate thing. spencer ackerman's scoop at wire.com tonight is the mindset is doing training for the fbi's counterterrorism officers. in july of this summer, spencer reported fbi trainees were being taught things from the weirder edge of the right wing anti-muslim fake expert movement with training materials saying things like islam transforms a country's culture into seventh century arabian ways.
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swayed more by ideas than by facts. which is the kind of thing you sort of expect to hear from your racist old uncle after a few too many cups of eggnog at the family event, not the kind of thing you expect from the elite federal counterterrorism force at the fbi. the fbi responded to spencer's story in july by saying, quote, this presentation in question was a rudimentary version used for a limited time that has since been replaced. it turns out there's more. with spencer ackerman reporting on another set of fbi training materials dated march of this year, bylined by the aformention of the "world daily net" interview. showing how over time since the founding of judaism, christianity and islam, over time the more paised and devoted you were as a jew or christian the less prone you were to violence.
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as spencer put it, as time goes on the followers of the torah and bible move from violent to nonviolent. that's not so for devotees of the koran. see the line that goes straight to the right? that shows over time religiously adherent muslims stay as violent as ever. in other words, as spencer puts it, religious muslims have been and always will be agents of aggression. joining us now is spencer ackerman, senior reporter for "wire" magazine. thanks for joining us tonight. congratulations on the scoop. >> thanks, rachel. >> any sense of how widespread this training is or whether this is an isolated incident? >> the fbi decided they didn't really want to tell me that. they told me this was training of agents who had two to three years of experience have gone through and said to me this is the opinions of this one particular author who you introed very well.
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we're trying to find out the extent of this training. >> i don't want to ask you, of course, who your sources are. why do you think someone is getting you this material from fbi training? is it because this is upsetting people inside the fbi? >> it's very deeply upsetting to counterterrorism experts inside the fbi. they're very concerned about two related issues which are counterterrorism and civil rights. and those two go hand in hand because as you remember the great jimmy mcnulty said on "the wire" a cop isn't anything without his sources of information. and unless there's community buy-in, in american muslim communities and other communities around this country, law enforcement can't do its job, can't learn about what's happening and alert to threats. if millions of american muslims feel they're being treated by the fbi like a target to be watched for aggression instead of americans whose civil rights are respected and protected, you're not going to cooperate
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with law enforcement. that's what dedicated counterterrorism officials inside the fbi are very disturb disturbed by these briefings. >> hearing the reaction is coming from inside the fbi is comforting if you're worried about the content of this material. when i summarized that in that introduction, did i summarize the worst of this? is there more you've uncovered or have been uncovering about this training that's more sketchy? >> there's tons of dozens of pages of documents we acquired at wire.com. stuff that talks about mohammed as a cult leader. stuff that talks about obscure version -- obscure passages in the koran as being weird guide posts to aggressive behavior. stuff that talks about an obligation to give charity in the muslim community as millions of americans do. as being simply a mechanism to fund combat. there's a lot of stuff here that people will find disturbing. >> spencer ackerman for "wired" magazine. thanks for letting us break this on tv tonight.
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it's your scoop. we're happy to have you here to cover it. we turn to richard engel, chief foreign correspondent. >> great to be here with you again. >> you reported in the 9/11 documentary we did together about a market for islam experts producing pretty non-mainstream radical training for local law enforcement -- >> this isn't the first instance of this. there have been many. it's happened with local police departments. i don't know the details of specifically what the reporter from wire.com found out about the fbi. there is a market for so-called experts who are painting themselves as counterterrorism experts and many of them are just peddling racism. >> in terms of how widespread that is, i know that so-called expert who we profiled in the documentary, i know he is a guy who travels all over the country and does this intensively with local law enforcement. do you have the sense this has infiltrated higher ranks or more broadly or into non-law
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enforcement areas? >> yes, yes it has. there are people who are presenting themselves as islamic experts or muslim world experts saying things exactly like were quoted in that article, that islam naturally leads to violence and if you read the koran that you're going to become a terrorist and that giving charity is a fund-raising mechanism for groups like al qaeda. and that is a major problem. it has emerged over the last decade. this association in people's minds between the religion of islam and terrorism and i can understand why some of the association might be there. this association, if it's penetrating law enforcement agencies, and it is penetrating law enforcement agencies, then you're going to have the exact backlash he talked about where the people on the ground, the sources of information to actually prevent terrorism aren't going to cooperate. >> that's the practical impact of it that -- >> it's stupid and wrong.
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the cartoonish slide. i hope that wasn't being used to train the fbi. it is shockingly disturbing if it is being used to train the fbi with the bible and the koran pointing up toward peace. the bible and the torah painting up toward peace and the koran pointing into some dark abyss. it's just ridiculous. if that's given forward as expert advice, it's a sad statement. >> richard engel, nbc chief foreign correspondent. thanks for your expertise on this. appreciate it.
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hey, programming note. we're going to be doing this show live from atlanta tomorrow. i'll be doing the first cable interview with former president jimmy carter with his white house diaries being released in paperback this week. that will be exclusive here at 9:00 p.m. eastern tomorrow here on msnbc. ugh, my feet are killin' me. well, we're here to get you custom orthotic inserts.
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dr. scholl's custom fit orthotic center recommends the custom-fit orthotic that's best for your tired feet. foot-care scientists are behind it. you'll get all-day relief. for your tired achy feet. for locations, see drscholls.com. thank you...
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back in january you may recall someone planted a bomb in a backpack along the route of the martin luther king day parade in downtown spokane, washington. workers spotted the backpack and its potentially fatal contents a half hour before the mlk parade. a bomb squad equipped with specialized robots and successfully disrupted the device. the parade got rerouted that day in spokane but took place even as the hunt for the bombing suspect began. this part is a little bit creepy. turns out the suspect was in the parade. he slipped into the crowd. he marched along with his
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intended victims. that's him there in the orange baseball hat there. trying to scoot out of the frame. he appears to be carrying a camera to document the destruction he hoped he was about to cause. see him more clearly here. fbi agents arrested kevin harpem, a neo nazi in washington state in march two months after finding the backpack bomb at the parade. this is his mugshot. he pleaded guilty to two counts including attempting to use a weapons of mass destruction and admitted the attack was motivated by race. harpham faces more than 30 years in prison. the fbi did a lot right here. from day one their very aggressive statements on this showed they were taking this very seriously. those strong statements from the fbi were part of why we covered this story from the beginning. they made no bones about playing this down. they said it was a big deal from the bomb inside was made of steel pipe filled with black explosive powder as well as
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shrapnel coated in rat poison. rat poison is an anticoagulant. he wanted those to not be able to stop bleeding. the shrapnel in the bomb, the stuff coated in rat poison, we now know was a bunch of fishing weights, ordinary fishing weights like ordinary non-violent people get to use their fishing lines to stay under water so the bait can attract the fish. the fbi found the same kind of fishing weights sold in packs of ten in walmart. they went through the sales records in the pacific northwest starting if 2010 and found what they were looking for, an unusual number of quarter-ounce fishing weight with sold in packs of ten in one week in november in one particular walmart store. and look who bought a large number of quarter-ounce fishing weights in november from that walmart.
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he bought them with jet puffed marshmallow cream and food items. he also bought a food chopper. he returned two days later and bought six more packs of those weights so that's 60 more pieces of shrapnel and four days after that 30 more weights, plus some more milk. and more marshmallow cream because you get really hungry when you make a bomb and the sugar make uz sugar? they also found the camera he bought so he could take pictures at the martin luther kings parade. they also were able to isolate his dna on the straps of the backpack he put the bomb in. earlier on the show tonight, we talked about fbi counterterrorism training that seems to have gone very badly wrong. training materials for fbi agents telling them they should think of islam as an
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under-evolved religion, that they should think of being religious as a sign of violent tendencies when it comes to muslims. far-right conspiratorial stuff being treated like real training at fbi. that was the bad news today about the fbi and counterterrorism. while we are on the subject of fbi and counterterrorism. it is worth pointing out something the fbi got really, really right. congratulations on closing the spokane bomber case the and thank you.
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okay. best new thing in the world today? it's back, yea. best new thing in the world today is a making lemonade out of lemons. some enterprising americans figuring out how to switch a really bad situation and it it's not less bad but at least cute.
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more than one out of every bridges in mitch mcconnell's home state of kentucky are structurally deficient or functionally obsolete. more than one in three, including urgently this one, the sherman minton bridge, a major artery into and out of senator mcconnell's home city of louisville over the ohio river to southern indiana. the sherman minton bridge was closed on friday are suddenly with no warning when be ran inspection found a very important crack in a very important load-bearing part of the bridge. president obama's american jobs act that he has been stumping for around the country woo, if it passed, fast-track about 700 million bucks to indiana and about 500 million bucks to kentucky right away, specifically to do stuff like fixing broken bridges. but kentucky senator, top senate republican mitch mcconnell, has denounced the american jobs act as not serious. his mitch mcconnell plan for dealing with more than one in
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three kentucky bridges needing to be replaced is apparently so serious it he's keeping it secret. in the face of rather monstrous traffic and detour adversity, like what is being faced in southern indiana and in kentucky right now, in the face of that kind of adversity, americans innovate. that means a brand new every 45 minutes $1 ferry service across the ohio river that did it not exist before, which is particularly handy if you work right at the bridge abutment. but still better, another option for getting across the ohio river there with sherman minton shut down. but it also means another kind of innovation in the form of branding and merchandising. when we first talked about the emergency shutdown of the sherman minton bridge on this show and the proverbial bomb it was dropping on louisville-area are traffic, i described it as that region's version of carmageddon. los angeles had what it called carmageddon one weekend this
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july because l.a. had to shut down the 405 freeway in both directions for construction work. carmageddon went off without a hitch in the end because there are was lots of warning, lots of advance publicity and ultimately only lasted a couple of days. in louisville, i noted their version of carmageddon came with no warning and is indefinite. nobody knows how major the needed repairs are going to be to this bridge. nobody knows where the money is going to come from, particularly if kentucky's home state senator mitch mcconnell is now against fixing bridges. but when the sherman minton's bridge occasions a version of carmageddon. had i been as smart as two louisville-important engineer brothers, i would realize this it disaster over the ohio river should not be called carmageddon but should be called shermageddon. there's a web site, a t-shirt, a travel mug, a bumper sticker and natull