tv The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC August 19, 2013 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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avik roy. athundershower author. msnbc policy analyst ezra klein questioning my premises. that is "all in" for this evening. the "rachel maddow show" starts now. good evening, rachel. good evening, chris. thank you very, very much. thanks to you at home for staying with us this hour. okay. this is laura poitras, an american filmmaker. she won a macarthur genius award last year. miss poitras makes documentaries. her first one was columbus, ohio, about gentrification in columbus, ohio. more recently she's been working on a trilogy about the war on terror. starting with a documentary about life in iraq under u.s. control during the u.s. war in iraq. the second part tells the story of two men from yemen including one who was a driver for osama bin laden. miss poitras is still working on the third installment in that trilogy which is about u.s. surveillance of phone calls and e-mails and so on since 9/11. she posted a bit of that one last year on "the new york times" website.
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>> build social networks for everybody. that turns into the graph then you index all that data to that graph which means you can pull out a community, that that gives you an outline of the life of everybody in the community. and if you carry it over time from 2001 up, you have that ten years worth of their life that you can lay out in a timeline that involves anybody in the country. even senators and house of representatives. all of them. the dangers here are that we fall into something like a totalitarian state like east germany. >> working with top-level sources like that former nsa employee, uncovering government secrets, shooting and producing her films all over the world, laura poitras, the documentarian, she has been busy. she's been doing traveling for her work, for her films, she found she gets stopped a lot at
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the airport and not anything like what you might get stopped for at the airport for. she's been stopped dozens and dozens of times at the airport. for interrogations that sometimes last for hours. miss poitras started taking extraordinary precautions with her data using encrypted e-mail, working on computers that were not connected to the internet. stashing her notes in safe deposit boxes. she kept on, though, getting stopped at the airport. starting in 2006, she was detained and questioned like that more than 40 times. in april of last year, salon.com wrote about what had been happening to laura poitras as she tried to travel, then finally, finally after that public attention, and that article from salon.com, the airport interrogations of laura poitras stopped. she found, okay, she can get on a plane again, more or less like the rest of us. the author of that article in "salon" about laura poitras was the loyal, blogger and civil liberties journalist glenn greenwald who teamed up with the subject of the article he wrote,
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teamed up with laura poitras along with reporting from the "washington post." exposes detailed much that we did not know before about the reach of america's intelligence agencies into the lives of ordinary non-terrorist, non-suspicious people living in this country. the way u.s. intelligence can and does track our phone calls, our e-mails, virtually all of it all the time. laura poitras and glenn greenwald have done this reporting based on classified documents, who has temporary asylum in russia. it is laura poitras and glenn greenwald who know what their source has to tell. it's they who have been telling his story, making news out of the documents he's given to them week after week now since june. yeah, their source may be in russia now, but they're not.
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glenn greenwald lives in brazil with his partner who's brazilian. laura poitras has been living in germany, to work on her documentary about u.s. surveillance without worrying the u.s. government will try to seize her material. earlier yesterday morning glenn greenwald got a call, informed him his partner, personal life partner, his boyfriend, had been detained by authorities in uk at the heathrow airport, david miranda, he's brazilian. he was on his way home from visiting laura poitras in berlin. british authorities held him at the airport for nine hours. questioning him about the reporting that glenn greenwald and laura poitras had been doing about surveillance. they seized mr. miranda's electronics, took his cell phones, thumb drives, video game players, they took a laptop. with the "guardian" newspaper lawyers at the airport, they finally let him go after nine
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hours of detention. the british law that allows that kind of detention does not require law enforcement to have a reasonable suspicion about the person they are detaining, but this seems important. the law only exists explicitly for the purpose of determining whether that person is or has been involved in the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism. that's what that law is for. that is the grounds on which they stopped him. that was the legal authority under which they held glenn greenwald's partner in detention for nine hours. acts of terrorism. journalism is not terrorism. journalism can be enraging to people in power. journalism can sometimes even be brightening to people in power. but journalism is not terrorism. reporting on what governments do, even when those governments prefer to keep those actions secret, is not terrorism. terrorism is a real and discreet thing in the world. it is not an all-encompassing term that you apply to everything the government
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doesn't want you to do. the white house, today, said it had been given a heads-up in advance that the detention of david miranda was likely to happen. britain gave the u.s. a heads-up before it happened. the white house went out of their way today to say that it was britain's decision to detain glenn greenwald's partner. it was not something the u.s. asked britain to do and, okay, fine, but the white house did know about it in advance and it still happened. we have that kind of special relationship with britain where if our government were outraged that this detention was going to happen, we could have objected, right? we could have at least asked our dear friends, the british government, to not do this. maybe in the interests of not intimidating the activities of the free press, if not for any other reason. did our government make any objections when they got advanced notice from britain that this detention was going to happen? did our government protest?
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and if not, why not? i tend to think that we did not protest since it went ahead. i know the u.s. government is not happy about laura poitras and glenn greenwald and the reporting about u.s. is surveillance. the president said it has led to a disorderly debate about these issues and though we ought to have a debate about these issues, it ought to be more orderly. fine. if the united states wants to convince the world that the glenn greenwalds and laura poitrases of the world is correct when they say the u.s. government is going too far, underline and put flashing red lights on the reporting that says counterterrorism is being used to justify all sorts of things not justified by the actual threat of terrorism and have, in fact, green lit gross government overreach and intrusion and intimidation of legitimate activity including journalism, then putting journalists and their families through marathon interrogations and seizing all their electronics is a really great way to start convincing the world that all that reporting is
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accurate. letting our closest allies do it while we stand silent is the same thing as us doing it. journalism is not terrorism. a dangerous affront to who we are as a country and democracy. it's an absolute outrage. [ male announcer ] this is claira. to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for her, she's agreed to give it up. that's today? [ male announcer ] we'll be with her all day to see how it goes. [ claira ] after the deliveries, i was okay. now the ciabatta is done and the pain is starting again. more pills? seriously? seriously. [ groans ] all these stops to take more pills can be a pain. can i get my aleve back? ♪ for my pain, i want my aleve. [ male announcer ] look for the easy-open red arthritis cap.
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terrible, for individual families, for people who lost their jobs, for us as a country. there was one quarter back in 2008 when our economic growth rate was negative 8.3%. that was the negative growth rate that quarter for the whole country. one of the weirdly unsettling manifestations of that very dark time in our recent history was when some towns and some counties and some states decided they had to unpave themselves. do you remember this when we decided that the united states of america could no longer afford paved roads? 38 counties in michigan started grinding their paved roads, their asphalt roads into gravel because they could not afford to keep them paved. in south dakota, 100 miles of asphalt road ground into gravel. in ohio, they couldn't afford to grind down their roads. ohio counties made an official decision to let their paved streets erode into unpaved streets. this started happening in 2009 when the economy was still just spiraling downward. by 2010, it was a national-level
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story that was covered to great effect in the "wall street journal" and some other places including on this show. it's happening in ohio and it's happening in alabama and it's happening in pennsylvania. which means that somewhere in china, it is entirely possible that a businessperson sat down for a ride on a 200 mile an hour state of art levitating bullet train and cracked open the "wall street journal" and read about how in america, we've decided we can't afford paved roads anymore. that is one of the stories that we did on show that really stuck with me from that time in and after the financial crisis. right? that was summer of 2010, three years ago. a symptom of how badly we were hit by the financial crisis and the recession it caused. now it is 2013 and the economy is the not, you know, shrinking 8% anymore. the economy is growing. of course, it would always be better to be growing more than it is, but comparatively we're doing much better than we were
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and have been for a few years now. and yet, today, in texas, another round has just begun of unpaving the roads. seriously. in four counties in south texas, and two counties in west texas, today is the day state started converting paved roads into gravel roads. texas state department of transportation made the announcement last month. "since paving roads is too expensive and there's not enough funding to repave them all, our only other option to make them safer is to turn them into gravel roads. to be clear, it's not like they're saying gravel roads are better. it's not like they figured out grounds on which gravel roads are more pleasing or more ecologically sound or somehow make you get the most out of your performance car or something. those are not artisanal roads. roads in texas are being unpaved because pavement is something we cannot afford there anymore.
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in this part of texas it's happening because of the "sharp increase in heavy traffic due to the oil boom." the damage related to energy development has become so extensive that state and local authorities lack the funding to make all the repairs. the problem increased heavy equipment and heavy truck traffic to service the energy industry in texas. oil companies, energy companies are doing great. that is why they're generating increased traffic. they are doing more business. they're making more money and they're tearing up the roads in the process. and you'd kind of think that wouldn't be the end of the cycle, right? you'd think there would be kind of a sort of cyclical arrangement. making more money. using up the roads to do it. need money to fix the roads. roads help us make more money. you think it would connect as a cycle, right? right. but no. the way that it is working in texas right now is the oil companies are making more money. they are grinding the roads into dust in order to make their more money. and then the end is there can't be roads anymore. what? what is going on here?
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it's like nobody's ever been able to figure out the missing link. the relationship between private enterprise, private individuals making profit, and there needing to be public infrastructure to facilitate them making that profit. what could possibly connect those two things? what does private profit do to contribute to public infrastructure that it needs in order to -- quoting from the "texas tribune," "efforts to increase taxes on the companies profiting from the energy boom to cover the road repair costs failed to gain traction." in texas politics. so texas as of today has started converting its roads to gravel. the state in some cases will be reducing speed limits on those roads to 30 miles an hour because, you know, they are not paved roads anymore. president obama was back at the white house today. his eight-day massachusetts vacation was marked by republicans angrily denouncing the fact he want on vacation at all. also the president making a
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sober statement from his vacation about the bloodshed in egypt. there were candid photos showing the president breaking the rule that presidents should never be photographed with anything on their heads. but also he doesn't look all that dorky. bike helmets are much cuter than they used to be. the president's vacation, though, also reportedly marked by some protests. low key local protests where the president was staying that were aimed at catching the president's eye. "dressed in a polar bear costume, jerry, the field director for the center of biological diversity has been all over the island trying to catch the president's eye as his motorcade drives past. at ali's general store, at bunch of grapes bookstore in vineyard haven. you name it. "polar bears not pipelines," he said, removing his bear head to talk to the "boston globe." "wherever he goes here, we want him to see an anti-keystone sign." there were reports last week that locals put up signs against the keystone pipeline in their
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front lawns during the president's visit hoping he'd see them when he drove past or road by on his bike in martha's vineyard. the keystone pipeline decision is pending for this president after he put it off last year to allow for more study on the issue. when it comes to our country dealing with canada's dirty oil and its by-products, one american fight against one giant pile of oily canadian mess has actually quietly just been won. it started right here on the banks of the detroit river in detroit, michigan, and yes, that is a giant nasty pile of something called pet coke. back in may "the new york times" highlighted what they described as a black mound of canadian oil waste rising over detroit. that oil waste is something called petroleum coke, a high sulfur, high carbon waste by-product of canadian oil sands. the pet coke that residents started spotting was put there
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by a company that owned it, a company call koch carbon, owned by the koch brothers. they started piling up all of this pet coke on banks of the detroit river before preparing to ship it off to other countries to be used as fuel. in addition to be a hideous eye sore, the pile also posed a potential health risk. we've got some video shot last month. look at this. look at that along the banks of the detroit river showing the black dust from the pet coke pile being kicked up in a storm that hit the area and just spreading everywhere. that black dust started blowing into nearby homes in detroit coming right through the windows. one local resident telling the "detroit free press" her apartment, "is a dusty place but it had never been that thick or dark." last month she wiped up a new coating of the dust with a sponge and provided it to the "detroit free press." subsequent testing ultimately confirmed the dust, indeed, contained pet coke. that same building in detroit
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also happens to house the office of a local state legislator named rashida tlaib. she told the "press," i've seen complete chaos with pet coke flying everywhere. the company storing the pet coke on that site on the riverbank never bothered to get a permit to store it there. after months of wrangling with the city, detroit officials have now finally had enough. detroit's mayor may not have much power anymore, now that the city is controlled by an emergency manager, but the mayor has, nevertheless, ordered those pet coke piles be removed by the next tuesday, by august 27th. the city official in charge says if they fail to remove it by the deadline, quote, we'll come down and padlock the facility. the koch brother facility plan to move the pet coke piles to ohio. in the meantime, though, thanks to the urging of local detroit residents and representatives, the coke piles that remain will
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be covered until they can be transported away. state representative rashida, said, quote, the mayor agreed with concern it needed to be covered immediately so it's not flying all over our neighborhood. age-old question in politics about the balance of power between the people and rich corporate interests, right? i mean, in our age, the richest corporate interests are energy companies. oil companies are the most profitable industry ever known in the history of keeping track of human profit. what is the balance of power in our country right now between us and them? between oil companies and us who live with what they do? in southern texas, and in west texas, it is local residents seeing their roads ground to dust. in detroit, the pet coke piles have to be moved by tuesday, but tonight in michigan also, two democratic state legislators are convening a town hall meeting to deal with the next one of these messes. the proposed dumping of canadian
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nuclear waste along lake heron. a proposed canadian underground radioactive nuclear waste repository off michigan's shore. these fights happen all over the country all time with companies that seem to only get more powerful. who wins these fights? and when it is the people who win these fights against the companies, how is it that the people win them? what makes for good strategy in fights like this? joining us now, rashida tlaib, representative, whose district includes the area of the state where the pet coke has been stored. thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> can you describe what it's been like to have this giant three-their pile of pet coke in your neighborhood in part of your district? >> it's four stories high and it's complete reckless disregard for hardworking people who are really struggling today to keep their neighborhood together and didn't deserve to have toxic dust lining up their homes, lining up their lungs. it was complete chaos.
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what's more disturbing is the fact the koch carbon company decided to come on to the detroit riverbanks with no permits. completely unannounced and put 4 stories high, 40 feet tall of petroleum coke along the river with complete disregard for protections that are in place, permits that they have to pull. none of us knew exactly what it was, and when we started getting our homes tested and finding that petroleum coke was in our homes and to a home where there was a mother who's having her first child, eight months pregnant, to a gentleman who just had surgery. it just disturbed us. it was complete anger that came all over through the neighborhood in trying to say we don't deserve this. we may not be billionaires, but we have right to breathe clean air, we have the right to actually deserve people to follow the laws. all of our business need to follow the laws. this one in particular was very disturbing that they decided to
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do this without the necessary regulations. >> when you started to understand the scope of the problem, and obviously from some of that footage that we've got, it seems like it's just blatantly clear to anybody who didn't have an immediate interest in the neighborhood. when you did start to realize the scale of the problem, how did you line up the coalition and alliance you needed to build in order to get this changed? the pet coke piles aren't gone, but they're scheduled to be gone next week. >> congressman gary peters has been leading the fight with me. a number of our residents. one of the things that's so important, i'm so proud of the local residents who know what they deserve which is clean air. know they deserve these protections. they fought so hard taking pictures at 7:30 in the morning, putting videos on youtube. all these residents constantly putting the footage. people going on their boats taking photos on their boats. it was constant watchdog over these piles. we kept going to the state, to
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our governor, to our mayor and demanding the piles get removed and covered immediately. we have one in four of our children in the southwest detroit community has asthma. we're already surrounded by a polluting industry. in this case, this was just throwing more dirt, more toxins into our lungs. we were very afraid. that encouraged people to work together and fight this and we won. >> rashida tlaib. michigan state representative. thank you for your time tonight. we know the deadline set by the mayor is on tuesday. we also know the company has blown past a lot of deadlines in the past. we'll stay on this. i hope you'll stay in touch with us as you hold them accountable. thank you. >> thank you. an immoral agenda, that is how one angry north carolinian is describing the recent rollback of rights in her home state. her decision about what to do about it, though, might make your day, might weird you out, might do both. and that story is coming up. stay with us. the end. lovely read susan.
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may i read something? yes, please. of course. a rich, never bitter taste cup after cup. 340 grams. [ sighs ] [ male announcer ] always rich, never bitter. gevalia. never bitter. a quarter million tweeters is beare tweeting. and 900 million dollars are changing hands online. that's why hp built a new kind of server. one that's 80% smaller. uses 89% less energy. and costs 77% less. it's called hp moonshot. and it's giving the internet the room it needs to grow. this&is gonna be big. hp moonshot. it's time to build a better enterprise. together. congestion, for it's smog. but there are a lot of people that do ride the bus. and now that the busses are running on natural gas, they don't throw out as much pollution to the earth. so i feel good.
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okay. you've got six people hiding out in a town of, what, 4 million people, all of whom chant all death to america all the live long day. you want to set up a movie in a week, lie to hollywood where everybody lies for a living. sneak 007 over here into a country who wants cia blood on their breakfast cereal and walk the brady bunch out of the most watched city in the world. >> that's about 100 militia at the airport. that's right.
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>> the story behind the movie "argo" happened in real life in 1979, but it didn't get declassified until almost 20 years later. it was one of those cia secrets, when it got revealed you couldn't believe it. it becomes an amazing book written by a cia officer at the center of the whole thing and becomes one of the greatest magazine articles ever in the history of great articles in "wired" magazine. and then somebody auctions it for hollywood and ben affleck goes all dry look and a beard and casts john goodman and everybody pretty much loves the movie and then it gets the oscar and, and, and. incredible story. i can't believe that actually happened. do you believe that was real? that was amazing. there are amazing cia secrets that get revealed in the world. and then there are the other kinds of cia secrets that are not so much amazing as they are no duh. we have had a rash of no duh cia secrets revealed in the past few days. these ones are probably less
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likely to ever star ben affleck and win oscars. but it is weird that we are learning about all of them right now. all of a sudden we're having all of these new disclosures. all in a rush. why is that? that story is coming up. stay with us. are you flo? yes. is this the thing you gave my husband? well, yeah, yes. the "name your price" tool. you tell us the price you want to pay, and we give you a range of options to choose from. careful, though -- that kind of power can go to your head. that explains a lot. yo, buddy! i got this. gimme one, gimme one, gimme one! the power of the "name your price" tool.
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take the next step. talk to your doctor. cymbalta can help. if you're in college and you live full time in an on-campus dorm, odds are you do not get utility bills in your name. you're in an on-campus dorm run by your school, in most cases your electricity and heat and everything else are folded into the overall cost of your room and board that you pay to your college as part of the cost of going to school. you also very well might not have a driver's license. if you're a full-time college student living on campus, you might have a car. in a lot of places that is not the norm. personally, i got my driver's license about 30 seconds after i turned 16. i saved up money from working and bought a car in high school before i turned 16 so it was ready for me the second i got my license. i was desperate to drive as a teenager. when i went to college, i did not have a car there. i don't even think i kept my driver's license current while i was in college. even though college students
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live life differently than they might otherwise live it if they weren't full-time students, the supreme court ruled clear as day college students have the right to vote where they go to school. college students can vote where they go to college. except maybe not in north carolina. last week the republican party chairman from pasquotank county in north carolina brought a challenge to a local elections board there saying a student from the local historically black college should not be allowed to run for office in the county because he couldn't be considered a local resident. the evidence against this student in part is that he doesn't have any utility bills with his name on them. which, of course, he doesn't have because he lives in the dorms at school. the newly appointed republican majority on the local elections board sided with the republican party chairman and they disqualified that young man from running for office. the same challenge would also block his right to vote in that county. the republican party chairman
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now says he will try to go after voting rights for all of the students at that local black college in elizabeth city using the same kind of residency challenge. he says, in fact, republicans should do that statewide given the success he's had against the students at elizabeth city. he told the associated press, "i plan to take this show on the road." that was tuesday of last week. monday of last week, the republican zbompb governor of north carolina pat mccrory signed a law that says you can't vote in north carolina unless you show a government-issued photo i.d. government-issued student photo i.d.s do not down for some reason. hundreds of thousands of north carolinians who are legal voters are thought to not have the i.d. that they will need in order to vote now. on monday night last week, it was over in watauga county in north carolina where the newly appointed republican majority on the local elections board there voted to shut down the voting
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and early voting location at the appalachian state university student union. that precinct, obviously convenient for students who wanted to vote, that precinct was at a school where the students have had a pesky proclivity for voting and voting democratic. they're shutting that one down. now, today it's forsythe county in north carolina where the newly appointed republican majority elections board there says they also want to get rid of the voting sites at their local historically black college which is winston-salem state university. so shut them down at appalachian state, shut them down at historically black elizabeth city, shut them down at historically black winston-salem state. shut them down. this all happened in the past week. voting rights under assault at warp speed in north carolina and it is more than just the new statewide law. republicans in north carolina are cracking down on the right to vote, systemically county by county, across the state. the republicans took over state government in november. that gave them the power to take over the voting process in every county in the state and we are witness now to their reaping what they sewed.
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county by county. school by school. shutting it down. one democratic state senator has decided she has had enough. in order to fight what is happening in her state right now, interestingly, she decided to quit her job as a state senator. ellie kinnaird has been a senator in north carolina since 1997. she's 81 years old and has been in the senate for more than 16 years. today she announced she is resigning her seat. "what led me to this decision are the actions taken by the republican majority in the legislature that has been a shocking reversal of the many progressive measures i and many others have worked so hard to enact. measures that over the years have made north carolina a model of moderate to progressive pro-business, but also pro-people public policy in the south. from the republicans' denial of health care security for our people, failure to provide a vibrant workforce for support of education systems, their tax cuts for the wealthy and tax
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increases for the poor and middle class, efforts to deny people their right to vote, they've been pursuing a divisive and, i think, immoral agenda" she says. "i'm heartened, however, though, by the many grassroots efforts to fight and it is here that i want and need to put my energy and efforts. i'm working with others on a grassroots project to make sure everyone in the state has a proper voter i.d. so no votes are denied though the voter i.d. bill is aimed at exactly that, repressing the vote. i'm going to work for candidates in the next election who reflect our values. i look forward to working together to change this course and restore our state to the shining beacon it was for so long." she's 81 years old, leaving her job as an elected official, state senator, to fight instead from the outside. at age 81. this is a person i want to meet. joining us now is ellie kinnaird, she resigned her state senate seat today in north carolina. thank you very much for being with us tonight. i know you've had a very busy day. >> thank you for inviting me. >> why quit the state senate?
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what to you think you can accomplish outside the legislature that you've not been able to accomplish in it? >> first of all, i can't accomplish anything in this session. we have two-year terms. the first session has the budget and also big bills like this voter i.d. bill. the second comes back to tweak the budget and finish up some unfinished business. for my situation, i can't do anything because i'm one of 17 democrats out of 50. i know what we've got to do to turn this around is to make sure people know they have a photo i.d. that is approved and it's a very narrow group of things that are allowed and then beyond that to make sure that people are registered to vote and most importantly know what precinct they're going to vote in. used to be if you came to the wrong precinct on election day, what happened is you got a provisional ballot.
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but now it's the exact opposite. your vote doesn't even count. that will have a great impact on students and other people because they've split so many precincts. people honestly don't know where they vote. >> you have been in the north carolina senate for over 15 years. you've seen a lot of north carolina politics. it's a striking and dramatic decision for me to see you as such an experienced legislator decide that the way to work on this is outside the system. how radical have the changes been that led you to this decision? how big a deal is this recent move? >> i think the straw that broke the camel's back is the voter i.d. bill which is going to greatly impact african-americans and other minorities which is also going to impact low-income people who may not have a driver's license, and it also, as i said, really impacts the students and that is a very
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significant group of people who are mostly voting democrat. so this is a very blatant and obvious way to suppress the vote of those who would not keep them in office. >> in terms of the some of what we are seeing with the students and the suppression of their right to vote, i'm thinking specifically about the case, the young man, matravius king, at elizabeth city. that historically black college on the east coast of north carolina. that seems to me tactics used against students there seem blatantly unconstitutional. the supreme court says students have the right to vote where they two to school, but republicans are systemically challenging that now. should we expect there's going to be a big legal fight over these matters in north carolina? >> i think that's one more legal fight. we already have a number already in the courts. but what is more serious is that in one county where one of our major universities is located, they have moved the voting site which was very early voting on
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the campus, and consolidated all of them into one precinct which means that all of those students who were voting on the campus in early voting, all the staff, all the faculty and all the townspeople will now be in one voting site. and, of course, that's really going to suppress it. i'm almost positive they are going to do this all throughout the states so what happens is every college town, and we have 17 universities in about 35 private colleges, they will challenge that now. they will take away those early voting sites where all the students and faculty and staff voted and they vote high quantity democrats. so we're very worried about that. >> former state senator ellie kinnaird who resigned her seat today in order to take this fight outside the legislature and throughout the state. senator kinnaird, thank you for helping us understand your decision tonight. good luck to you. i appreciate your time. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. all right.
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there's been a lot of serious stuff on the show tonight. there's a lot of serious stuff going on in the world. that's how it works. but did you see the new dog? new dog. new white house dog. did you see? hold on. that's next. we've got pictures and everything. stay with us. ctor running late for a medical convention loses his computer, exposing thousands of patient records to identity theft. data breaches can happen that easily. we don't believe you should be a victim of someone else's mistake. we're lifelock. we constantly monitor the web so if any of your personal information is misused, we're on it. ♪ ow. [ male announcer ] call 1-800-lifelock or go to lifelock.com today.
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so everybody knows bo, right? bo is the dog of the obama family. he's a portuguese water dog. he's almost five years old now and he, frankly, has run unopposed in terms of cuteness throughout president obama's time in office. well, that all changed today. bo now has competition in the form of this. new puppy. hi, girl. hello. hi. hi. this is sunny. sunny is also obviously a portuguese water dog with the ridiculous hairdo that portuguese water dogs get from god. we got the new news today that new dog, sunny, also now lives at the white house and also belongs to the obamas. she is 14 months old which presumably means she's been in, like, how to become a white house dog boot camp training for a few months. i don't know. her arrival at the white house was announced today in a series of tweets and in an official video this afternoon. and if you think you cannot deal
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with the new dog's adorableness, save the thought today for bo who now must deal with no longer being the undisputed cutest member of the obama family. it's okay, bo. it's going to be okay, big guy. hang in there. weekdays are for rising to the challenge. they're the days to take care of business. when possibilities become reality. with centurylink as your trusted partner, our visionary cloud infrastructure and global broadband network free you to focus on what matters. with custom communications solutions and responsive, dedicated support, we constantly evolve to meet your needs. every day of the week. centurylink® your link to what's next. speoi go to angie's listt for all kinds of reasons. to gauge whether or not the projects will be done
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okay. the man on the right in this picture we're going to put up. see the red arrow? the man on the right, one of the guys holding binoculars, that is president kennedy. it's 1962. he's at camp lejeune in north carolina. and he's holding binoculars because he is watching the marine corps practice landing operations. the other guy with the binoculars there on the left, that is vice president lyndon johnson. sitting between president kennedy and vice president johnson is the king of iran. iran has a king.
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or at least iran had a king. except they don't use the word king. they call him the shah. the shah, mohammed reza pahlavi. here he is again on that same trip with president kennedy and with both of their wives, first lady jacqueline kennedy and also the empress of iran. the shah's wife. the government of iran and our government used to be, to use a technical term, besties. we were really close with iran. we were double date with the king close with iran. of course now our governments could not be more at odds. we have no formal relations with iran. we don't have an embassy there. they don't have an embassy here. but we did used to be very, very close allies. and one of the major reasons that that relationship ended was because of the shah and the cia. it was called "operation ajax. august 1953. so in iran the shah was the king. he was technically in power. but iran also had a prime minister who was democratically
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elected. and the elected prime minister in 19 53 was mosadeq. he was very popular. he also wanted policies that the shah did not want. and he scared the bejesus out of the west. so much so that "operation ajax" was hatched by the cia to overthrow that prime minister in iran. the straw that broke the camel's back, the reason they decided he definitely had to go, was him crusading for iran to own its own oil. the shah had cut a deal with the british to essentially let england own all of iran's oil. but mossadegh said that was ridiculous, it was a terrible deal for iran and frankly a majority of iranians agreed with him. he was very, very popular among his own people. and he was very unpopular outside of iran. especially in the west. especially among leaders of the uk, who until that time quite enjoyed totally running iran's oil operation with the blessing of their friend the shah. and then here comes this
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democratically elected guy, this populist guy, telling the king of iran and telling the prime minister of england and telling the president of the united states that he is going to reclaim his country's oil industry because that's what he thinks is fair, and most iranians agree with him. danger, will robinson. danger. obviously, that could not stand. and so we, the united states, specifically the cia, hatched a plot to overthrow that prime minister. it was internally justified over here because he was giving our friends in england and our good buddy the king of iran a really hard time and we were also scared that he seemed too friendly with the communists in his country. so in the early 1950s we organized a coup to overthrow the democratically elected leader of iran. we used propaganda and subterfuge to gin up and fake street protests. we pressured our buddy the shah himself to sign a decree forcing the prime minister out of office.
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the shah had to flee iran for his own safety for a while once he did that. but the coup did work. and the elected prime minister, this populist guy, was forced out. and so our good pal the king was returned to the throne in iran. and britain's oil interests were kept safe for a little while longer. and mossadegh spent the rest of his life under house arrest. and then, spoiler alert, here's how that all turned out. not all that many years later. within a generation the iranian revolution. when iranians ousted the shah, the guy who we had artificially ensconced on his throne in iran. turns out people do not like having their leaders picked for them by the cia. they don't like having their leaders picked for them by anybody, but maybe particularly by the cia. and after years of all this being known but not officially owned up to by the cia, today the cia admitted for the first time ever, okay, yeah, we did it. we were behind that world-changing coup in iran back in the 1950s.
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they released a cia internal history, not only admitting to it but explaining how they did it and why. and that admission is both a huge deal and also, as i said, something everybody already knew since, oh, say, pretty much the day after the coup happened in the first place. look at the date on this story. august 20th, 1953. the day after the cia carried out "operation ajax." open charges that the u.s. implicated in the first stages of the coup. this was the day after the coup, they were already saying it was us. but we've always formally denied it until today. and this is such a widely known thing that we did that there is literally an app for it. >> introducing "operation ajax" for the ipad. based on actual events of the cia's involvement in overthrowing the iranian government. >> so the cia today admits something that was already universally known but was still officially a secret thing. and there have been a flurry of
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these kinds of no duh cia admissions lately. on friday the cia admitted that area 51 exists, that secret tract of land in nevada where ufo conspiracists think the cia did all their secret experiments on aliens. on friday the cia admitted, yes, area 51 exists, but they did not admit that the alien stuff exists. also last week the cia admitted that yes, for years they had kept a file on the linguist and left-wing philosopher and anti-war activist noam chomsky. they'd always denied they had done that. but it was pretty much inconceivable that they wouldn't have been keeping tabs on him given who else we know they were keeping tabs on at that time. we always knew it, but now they are admitting it. how come? when you implausibly deny stuff that everybody knows is true, it costs you some of your credibility. if we know it is so, if it is proven to be so, if it is widely reported and admitted to be so but you just won't formally admit it, you don't seem all
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that trustworthy in your formal statements anymore. so it is a good thing for the credibility of the u.s. government that the cia is now admitting this stuff formally that everybody has already reported and figured out. it's also why it was good for the credibility of the u.s. government when we finally got an admission from the obama administration that we are in fact killing people with drones outside of war zones. instead of hearing them say for years in the most passive way possible that people had been killed under circumstances we could not comment on that we all knew were drone strikes, it helped when they finally admitted, yeah, we're killing people with drone strikes. and that is why it is good now for the credibility of our government that we are finally getting this admission from the cia about what happened in iran. and yeah, maybe it took until today, until the 60th anniversary of the coup, but they never saw fit to admit to it before and now they did. credibility is priceless. and it is an important thing. a praiseworthy advance when our government stops implausibly denying what is widely known and proven to be true. if this is the new cia approach under director john brennan,
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then thank you, director john brennan. if in your life people believe you when you talk, it is a sign of credibility well earned and in some ways of a life well lived. same goes for government. if you are in public service, try to leave government more credible than how you found it today began with ted cruz's senate press secretary trying to deny that the senator has ever been a canadian citizen. and just minutes ago ted cruz was forced to announce that he will officially renounce his canadian citizenship that his staff tried to pretend he never had. >> there are many problems in life that we can't fix. >> hillary clinton's early engagement in the 2016 campaign. >> i as a strategist am fairly floored.
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