tv News Nation MSNBC June 2, 2014 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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deteriorating and that made it all of the urgent to have the release. in this, you have a uniformed person of the military detained and held and prisoner of war and it is absolutely the right thing to do, because the united states is not going to leave our men and women behind in armed confli conflict. >> and ayman mow ha dean joining us now. jay carney did not give any more information on the health crisis that the administration says he was facing, but what do we know regarding the treatment at the medical center. >> well, tamron, we understand from the officials here that he is going a full medical health checkup, and the reintegration is a separate process. right now at landstuhl, he is being evaluated by health
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official s officials to organize his health and physical and mental process is doing, and then the reintegration will continue, and exposing him to some of the media and the statements that the family has made, and there is no doubt when that process is going to get under way since the process is ongoing, but they say it is is happened before, and it is driven by the fasht and the conditi condition. he has been in captivity for five years, and that is a long time, and there could be post-traumatic stress disorderer, and other psychological issues, but they have to know the overall well-being before they can even talk about a transfer to the u.s. >> and eam aman -- ayman, we kn
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that the mother and the father spoke at a press conference, but when will they speak to their son? >> that is drien by the condition of the patient, and the officials here are not giving any indication of when or how that process would unfold, and they have described it on the previous conditions of prisoners coming through landstuhl, they have said it is driven by the willingness and the capability of the patient, and once he or she is ready, a they would be exposed to the media and have access to the television, and see what is said about them, and then importantly, make the initial decision whether they want to speak to their family. it will happen in due course, but so far, there have not been communications between sergeant bergdahl and the family. >> and we are hearing more reports, ayman, fellow soldiers have called him a deserter, and
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saying that his selfish act cost the lives of soldiers who went in search for him. and have we heard any new comments regarding that allegation from, again, fellow soldiers even in his unit? >> at this particular point, nothing officially. and obviously, the military at this stage in dealing with this is focusing him as a patient and not a soldier. but we understand that there is going to be a lot of questions, and several sets of debrief iin to take place with the sergeant bergdahl. the military will have the questions as to whether or not he has important information from the time spent in captivity, and whether or not he can identify the whereabouts, and the conditions of where he left. and in the past, when sergeant bergdahl left the base in 2009, he left without a weapon, and described as wandering off with nothing more than a bottle of water, and compass which led to the taliban capturing him. and as reported, several units were deployed at the time to go search for him near the base,
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and there is no doubt that there are lots of questions about his condition, and in terms of how he left the base, and why he left the base, and some indications that he was disillusioned with the service in the military and so that could have been a motivating c factor, but polarizing figure nonetheless, and you will hear his community, and family welcoming him, but you will have at the same time tough questions from the fellow servicemen, and politicians on capitol hill. >> thank you, aman myuyellen. >> governor, let me start with you, and i don't know if you have seen the images, and if we have them, we will show them of the taliban, and the members of the taliban released in the exchange greeted with hugs and embraces. we know that the taliban has said that this is a victory for them.
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when you see or hear of these images of celebration, from sworn enemies of this country, for this exchange, what is your reaction? >> well, my reaction is that for the united states bringing back an american soldier not leaving him behind was paramount. now, this is going to be c controversial, but at the same time, the future of the taliban prisoners has to be in the hands of the, i believe, of the mediators the and will they enforce the one-year travel ban, and secondly, noncommandants, and we don't have the information. this is agreements that i have been in the hostage ne goebiations, and they have to be kept secret and no leaks. you so strike when the timing is right, but what it might lead,
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t tamron, if just one element of trust has been instilled in the negotiations through the qataris, with the taliban, maybe potential for a continuation of the dialogues and the lessening of the tension as we wind down the presence in afghanistan. >> i do want to talk about the criticism of the republicans who say that the president did not give notice to congress about the transfer of a prisoner from get moeshgs and i want to focus in, governor richardson, to your point, that there is a lot of trust needed and belief in the qatari leadership to keep these individuals there and the k conditions for the release and will be protected and kept in place, but this morning, jay carney was asked about the possible security threat posed to the united states now that
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those individuals have been released, and here is his replay. >> the secretary of defense chuck hagel and the national security team made a determination that because of the mitigation that we can engage in with third country qatar, that we believe that this is not a security threat to the united states, and that there's sufficient mitigation to be comfortable with the transfer of those detainees to qatar. >> and governor, there seems to be a lot of the if then trusts, and these words that are in the universe, but we in reality don't know what these individuals are capable of and what they will do, correct? >> correct. but we trust the qataris who have been with us in libya and they are independent. they play an important role, and
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we can't be assured, tamron, what the talibans are going to do, but in the past prisoner exchanges and the past deals like this, a lot of the taliban fighters that used to be hostile did not go back into the combat. i don't have the exact statistic, so i am not saying that it is going to happen, because it is a lot of uncertainty, because it is a uncertain deal, but the president acted. he did the right thing, i believe, because i served in congress, too, and the 30-day notification, and the president questioned it, based on h his executive authority, and can you imagine, waiting 30 days? they might have changed their mind? they might have killed the hostage. and there is no president in the time of war or negotiating for h hostages has to have some
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flexibility. >> let me bring in terri brown who is standing by as well. and kerri, we got this in from andrea mitchell at a security conference with the obama national security adviser tom don lynn and he responded to the criticism, and defending the deal, and flatly denies a charge made by the house intelligence chair mike rogers who said on sunday that the administration had consulted congress before the raid on bin laden and therefore should have been trusted before consulting the deal with bergdahl, and he said that there was no consultation with congress at any time before the bin laden raid because of the importance of the operational security, and so mike rodgers says if we were consulted about bin laden, then we should have been consulted with this deal, but it is flatly denied. >> this is going to show you how the story emerging over the weekend will make the furor over
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shinseki firing seem less and you will see the attention shift to this. and like governor richardson said, the disagreement of tom donlan said. and i think that there are a number of questions that jay carney is going to have to answer in the briefing in an hour. and this is a legitimate debate on both sides. the president, we are hearing the argument from the white house is that they had to act. the congress said that even though the president needed to noti notify them in 30 days, he issued a signed statement saying that he would not go by that, and this is a prime example of why you have to pay attention to the fine print as the legislative process goes through and the president warned congress saying i don't agree with that, and i'm not going to
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follow it, and that is what he did here. >> and chuck hagel regarding the u.s. policy, and the idea of negotiating with terrorist, and let's play chuck hagel, please. >> first ofall, we didn't negotiate with ter the errorists, and what we did in getting our prisoner of war released in any way would somehow encourage terrorists to take our american servicemen prisoner or hostage. >> governor, did we negotiate with terrorists? there is a fine line. and the primary purpose here is to get an american soldier out, and commandant winding down the war, and then secondly, we did not negotiate directly, and we had the interlockiters.
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and look, they exchanged 1,100 terrorist member s s of hamas a hezbollah previously, so you can't get proportionate or bogged down in the rhetoric. what we did is to get an american soldier out, and the precept of standing by the men and women in uniform, getting him out was sacrosanct here, and that is what happened. >> carrie, the last question here, and the complexity of that as you heard the governor lay out, in the end, you have a young american soldier who was not left behind and how dicey for republicans who have their criticism right now? >> sure, sure. i think that you touched right on it, tamron where it is a fine line for the republicans as well how hard you go after the president and the government for
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trying to rescue one of their own? war is complex, and clearly this case is complex, and that is why i don't think that the, i think that the issue will be litigated publicly for the foreseeable future, because of all of the issues that we are talking about here. >> carrie, thank you here. and thank you for the timing and the incredible insight on these issues, sir, governor richardson. and coming up, we will talk to a family friend of bergdahl, and she was his former boss before he entered the army, and she is going to join us from his home state of idaho. and a nationwide manhunt for this california p.r. specialist. he is described as armed and dangerous, and this is after the federal officials found a chilling discovery in his san francisco apartment. over the weekend, ryan kelly chamberlain the second had his apa apartment raided and they found potentially deadly explosives and chemicals.
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joining us is laura dominic from the "san francisco examiner." >> they did not tell us what happened saturday, but they were there, and they had a portion of jackson street in the russian hill neighborhood blocked off with tents and hazmat crews going in and out of the apartments where they did confirm yesterday they did find hazardous materials. >> and there is a nationwide manhunt for him, and what do you know? >> well, it appears ties to iowa and he graduated from iowa state university and worked on a n number of the democratic political campaigns, and he has listed a number of personal feats on the website that he appears to have run, and including that he once turned lombard street here in san francisco to a life-sized candy land and it is reportedly true that he worked on the team representing sully sullenberger
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with the 2002 landing on the hudson. >> and have the authorities said that he is targeting a particular individual, organization? what more do we know regarding what they allege he planned to do with the explosive and the deadly chemical that was found. >> well, he is the only person who they are looking for in this case. it is believed right now that he is acting alone, and as i said before, there is no motive for why he may have had these explosives allegedly in the home, but right now, he is considered armed and dangerous, an unknown whether he is going to have explosives in person, but anybody who sees him should not go near him, and call 911 immediately and considered armed and dangerous, and he is driving a car that has california or texas license plate which is a 2008 nissan ultima, and do not approach him, because him is considered armed an dangerous. >> all right. thank you for the details. and right now, the obama administration makes a major decision of slashing the
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greenhouse gases from the air we breathe. and the republicans say that the new epa rules would affect jobs and the economy. and the fbi questioning phil mickelson on the golf course, and what he says about a reported insider trading investigation involving the pro golfer and millions of dollars. plus, can you believe it has happened again? one of the popular bounce houses going airborne with the children trapped inside. it is one of the stories that ewith are following around the "newsnation," and join our conversation on twitter, and you can find me@tamronhall, and the team @"newsnation." etwork 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.
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plan that marks one of the broadest steps that the government has ever taken to curb climate change, and move guaranteed to set up another pl political showdown. the goal is to clean up the air quality by slashing the amount of carbon emissions produced by power plants everyday. 30% reduction by 2030. it is expected to slow global warming, but also reduce asthma, and risk of heart attacks in this country. >> for the sake of our families' health, and for our kids' future, we have a moral obligation to act on climate. >> senate minority leader mitch mcconnell says that the announcement is a dagger into the heart of the middle-class and to democracy, itself. and reeling from the painful effects of the obamacare, now the american people are told they have to shoulder the burden of the president's latest solutions in the form of higher costs, fewer jobs, in the less reliability energy grid.
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and joining us is coral of "the new york times," reporter. and this is from senator mcconnell weaving in obamacare to the global warming and what to do for it. it is going to set the stage for the kind of battle that the republicans want to wage, and the ones that the democrats were expect i expecting. >> it does, and the fight over the climate change regulations in many ways will be similar to the fight over obamacare, and we will see it play out in to a big way in the midterm elections, and some of the elections are taking thing place in states where xocoal is a huge part of e country. and west virginia and kentucky and major coal producers, and we will see that in some of the elections, but the way it is similar to the obamacare, is that this rule will give the states a requirement to come up with their own state by state climate change plan and similar to how the health care law
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turned over the authority to the state, and we will see a similar dynamic where a lot of the states with the republican governors and the states with the heavily dependent on the coal will fight back and sue and potentially refuse to implement plans, so that the analogy to the obamacare debate in terms of how it will play out politically is right. >> and one pro coal lobbyists says that the rule would be expensive and controversial and intrusive for the households and businesses. but by 2030, the benefits would outweigh the costs by an 8 to 1 ratio. >> so the epa put out a cost benefit analysis, and said that the rule will inflict 7 to $9 billion in economic costs, but we'd have up to $90 billion in
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economic benefits which is count ed to people being less exposed to coal pollution, and less sickness and missed work days, and this is typical, because the epa, when they do a rule, they put out the cost benefit analysis, and they can't put out a rule that is going to cost more than it will have overall have a cost to the economy. a and so this is going to be a fight that is going to play out, and what is the real cost of this rule. >> coral, thank you so much and we appreciate your reporting. and checking with golfer phil mickelson who is responding to the fact that he is caught up in an insider trading investigation. >> i have done absolutely nothing wrong and that is why i am fully cooperating with the fbi agents. >> well, the lawmakers say that the government officials are facing major hurdles to move the case forward and coming up next, i will talk to the "wall street journal" reporter who reported.
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and also, the release of bowe bergdahl's release, and the controversy. and senior editor mark murray will join us. and the first lady is going to kick off the construction of the new navy submarine, the "uss illinois." >> the president is going to end the week by marking the celebration of the d-day anniversary. delicious milo's kitchen chicken meatballs. they look homemade, which he likes almost as much as making new friends yes, i'll call her. aww, ladies' man. milo's kitchen. made in the usa with chicken or beef as the number one ingredient. the best treats come from the kitchen. ♪
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i mean, he picks up the tab every time, which is great...what? he's using you. he probably has a citi thankyou card and gets 2x the points at restaurants. so he's just racking up points with me. some people... ugh! no, i've got it. the citi thankyou preferred card. now earn 2x the points on dining out and entertainment, with no annual fee. to apply, go to citi.com/thankyoucards welcome back. champion golfer phil mickelson says he is fully cooperating with the federal officials after reports surface that he is part of the fbi probe into posable insooi trading. and now according to the "wall street journal," they are loo g looking into whether mickelson and carl icahn and golf course investment william walters had a
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conversation about a private takeover of clorox and when it was announced, it drove up the cost of the shares for the stock, and all men are denying it saying they have never met each other, and speaking to reporters in dublin, ohio, mickelson said that he is going to do whatever he can to clear his name. >> i have done absolutely nothing wrong, and that is why i have been fully cooperating with the fbi agents, and i'm happy to do so in the future, too, until this gets resolved, but for right now, and hopefully it is going to be soon, but for right now, i can't talk much about it. >> and joining me now is "wall street journal" reporter susan olean, and you were the writer of the article who exposed this. and phil mickelson said that i
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am not guilty of anything, and carl icahn said that while i have obviously heard of phil mickelson, i have never spoken to him or have any relationship with him. >> and so they were at the evidence-gathering stage when we broke the story, and now that they cannot gather the information secretly, and maybe it is going to be difficult to move forward, and when we have to see. >> this the original "wall street journal" investigation, part of this information could have been a wiretap, but the authorities ran into complications there? >> yes, right, apparently, wub -- one of the things that they bumped into is that icahn has assets that prevents them from surveillance i surveillancing the phone of him. and it is difficult to get wiretaps and so we don't know how close they were, but you
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have to have a lot of evidence to do something like that. >> and what is the information that the investigators were working for, because this is the early stages of uncovering information, and evidence if it does exist, but connect the dots of how it got to the investigati investigation? >> well, the first thing that happened is that icahn announced a bid for clorox in july of 2011, and prior to the bid, and four days before, there was unusual trading in options, and so the authorities turned up trades by mickelson and walters that were linked to that buyout, and apparently have some evidence that links those trades to icahn as well. so, since then, they have been probing other trading activity in trying to figure out, you know, what other stocks and situations were involved. one of the other stocks that they have apparently connected the dots on is dean foods, but that is one that does not connect icahn, but it is walters and michelson. >> and forbes named mickelson
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the seventh highest athlete and brought in $4 million in prize money, and we know icahn's financial status as well as walters, and is there anything that links the men to any other business deal. they both say they don't know each other, and is there a common business link thats been uncovered? >> well, not business link, but it is a thing that is based on the friendships. icahn and walters had apparently had something of a friendship. they talked periodically about stocks. and then, of course, walters and mickelson know each other from the golf course. they, walters owns golf courses, and so that is where their connection is. and there is no connection of icahn and mickelson. >> and what do we know about the investigation moving forward now that it is reported and the details have been made public? >> it could make it hard efor
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the authorities to bring a case. their ability to wiretap or, you know, secretly record conversations may be hampered, because obviously now that the targets know that they are under investigation, and at this point, they may have to build a case on what has already happened or the evidence that is cumulative, and which may or may not be enough. we will have to wait and see what happens there. and coming up we will talk to the former boss of bowe bergdahl, and worked with him in a coffeeshop in idaho. and plus, new orleans quarterback drew brees and his message for other busy dads ahead of father's day. that we serve. people here know that our operations have an impact locally. we're using more natural gas vehicles than ever before. the trucks are reliable, that's good for business. but they also reduce emissions, and that's good for everyone. it makes me feel very good about the future of our company. ♪
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to give him a welcome home. >> and first, tell me the reaction of the news that you heard that bowe had been recovered and home soon? >> well, it was a huge, huge sense of relief. we have been very concerned about bowe and the welfare and particularly since hearing that the health is in a diminished condition right now, and under the current politics of withdrawing some of the troops from afghanistan, we were eager to get our man home. >> you mention ed the politics f it, and i will ask you about that, but i want to first get your thoughts on bowe. tell us a little bit about this young man, and particularly the guy that you knew before he j n joined the army. >> bowe is a very interesting young man. he is a seeker, and interested in people and what they do and how they think. he is very introspective, and he is a strong independent young man who's been growing up here in the valley with a long leash. we refer to it that they get to
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adventure in the back country, and the mountains and the rivers a lot of times on their own and friends, contemporaries, and he was very like many of the children here sh, that young gr into young adults that have developed a sense of independence and resiliency, and resourcefulness that they, i will find that it will serve bowe very well in his next steps here in life. >> and so was it a surprise here when he decided to join the army? did that fall in line with the personality, do you think? >> well, bowe was involved in a diversity of events here from mountain biking and climbing and fencing and the only thing that he did not do was to drive a car. he was interested in all aspects of life, but he was a helpful man, and he always wanted to reach out the help people. as i understand, his commitment to he wanted to go into the a y
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army, and perhaps try to help the situation overseas. >> and his father made the comments along that line following the news that bowe would be headed back home. his father said that he was proud of his son reaching out to he heldp the people of afghanistan. you mentioned the politics of this, sue, and i'm sure that you have heard the back and forth criticism of the administration by some who say that this deal could put the safety of americans in jeopardy, and what is your response to those who say that this should not have happened in the way that it has. >> well, i think that there were unique circumstances in a delicate process and complicated situati situation. and as i say, i'm understanding that bowe has had concerns and safety concerns which is a continuum all along. i know that there is particulars that i am not aware of that only the countries and the people that have been negotiating this
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rele release are aware of. on the very personal connection to bowe and the family, i'm not concerning myself with the politics burk s politics, but i find it ironic that bowe is captured in the process of protecting our freedom of speech, and what is lashing out at him is the particular freedom of speech, so it does not alter any of my opinions or experience with bowe. >> i see the yellow ribbon behind you, and just in the foreground, and i know that throughout the fife years while this story was not national head loo headline s for the people of haleha hailey, idaho, it was not a priority for the country to bring him back, and were you feeling that idaho, his hometown was remembering him alone? >> well, i didn't have that sense of it. i'm in a unique position here where i'm expose d to people ona daily basis and often people came here with hailey with a
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specific purpose to come here to zany's to express the support. it was continuum of people coming in. and people came in intentionally all over the board and offer their support. >> it is great to hear that there were many who showed up there to offer the support. i know that you and the family and the entire town as i understand it are excited that he is going to be coming back soon. thank you so much, and i greatly appreciate it, sue, and thank you for your time. and now for the continued political fallout of the swap involving bergdahl's release. and now, including whether the president had the authority to make it happen. this is republican congressman adam kensington on the release of an iraq war vet here. >> and the release to five high
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level taliban are shocking to me, because you will have them on the ground targeting afghan people, and american troops and there is a lot of question s s be asked e here. this whole exchange is shocking to me. >> and joining me is senior editor mark murray and talk about the history here, because people say now a precedent and the taliban and other organizations now say that we have something to work with. and historically speaking, does this compare to anything else? >> well, tamron, one of the things that is worth noting is that there is a big differentiation of dealing with hostages or the prisoners of war and throughout the history and the history of other countries, the prisoners of war have always been negotiated over and even with the most unsavory types of folk folks, and so that is important distinction, and the obama administration says that bowe bergdahl was a prisoner of war and we have to bring them home as we wrap it up. but kristen welker on the weekend nightly news mentioned
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last night that ronald reagan when he was president negotiated for hostages with iran in the 1980s, and so it is something that goes on all of the time. and american presidents say that you never e negotiate with the terrorists, but they do happen when you deal with prisoners of war. >> and there is also more con trover si over whether congress should have been notified when prisoners are released. >> well, this is a separation of powers that is fascinating. it is a law that has been passed that gives congress 30 days of notice before any leave of any prison in guantanamo in cuba. but the fact is that if we left it to congress, it would be
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impossible to get bergdahl back, and this is left to the commander in chief, and within his right, and power as commander of chief to conduct this. this is not going to be a issue for the supreme court, because they are deferential when it comes to the situations for the president of the united states, and also, important, is deep down, when the republicans are president next, they want their president to have the power and not have a democratic-controlled congress to get something done like this that we saw over the weekend. >> thank you, mark. we greatly appreciate it. the woman at the center of donald sterling's scandal says she was attacked at a manhattan hot spot this weekend. it is one of the stories we are following around the nation. and up next, super bowl champion drew brees about how he is celebrating father's day and being a role model for his three sons. ♪
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that left several people dead including billionaire lewis katz tops the "newsnation" this morning. authorities are searching for surveillance video that may have captured the crash. a witness said he saw it go past the run wway and into the em banksment before it burst into flame flames. he is the former own of the new jersey nets and "philadelphia enquirer" and he was leaving a fund-raiser at the home of pulitzer prize winner doris kearns goodwin. and now, frightening injuries in a bounce house. police in littleton say that a young girl was thrown eight feet into the air when the inflatable bouncey house was blown away, and another boy was trapped inside as it traveled nearly 300
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feet. neither boy is believed to have serious injuries, and this is terrifying, with the second injuries as of late. and v. stiviano says that she was assaulted by two men when she left a club. and she gained notoriety when she revealed a tape that had donald sterling making remarks. and sterling told reporters that he was there to support this wonderful group. >> well, today's "newsnation," gut check, do you support the president's decision to release the taliban prisoners for bowe bergdahl? you can tell us by going to msnbc "newsnation"@msnbc.com. what is that thing? they could be all around you right now. [ gasps ]
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morning and here's some things we thought you should know. the king of spain is moving over to make room for his only son, fell looep juan carlos suffered health problems and corruption scandals in recent years. jay kacarney appeared on "morning joe" this morning prom talking about what prompted his decision. >> i fell into a job i love, assistant communications director and then the president asked me to be his press secretary and that was three and a half years ago almost. i got a couple of kids still pretty young. and five and a half years is a fairly long amount of time to be not fully present. >> those are the things we thought you should know. listen up, dads, as father's day approaches, dads who do more household chores are more likely
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to raise daughters who aim for prestigious careers. researchers surveyed over 300 families and found that girls that see their dads doing dishes and other chores are more likely to become lawyers and ceos and other high-paying professionals. one dad who makes it a point to express teamwork, drew brees and his wife britney raising three adorable boys of their own and running their foundation for over a decade has hepds family affected by cancer by providing care and support and educational opportunities. joining us now, drew brees. good morning, good to see you. >> good morning. i love that statistic, especially since we have a daughter on the way, the more dishes i do and laundry, the more chances she has of being successful. >> your wife britney is like, bravo and it's appropriate, you have laundry behind you.
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>> all moms love that statistic, they are like, yes, i can't wait to tell my husband that, more dishes, more laundry. do it. make sh sure our daughter sees. >> she should post it on the refrigerat refrigerator, closet, so you see that. i know you equate how you have a team at home with the way you run the team on the field. how did you come up with that? is that something you learned from your own family? >> i'll give you an example, this was britney's idea, whenever our boys are 5, 3 and 1, times can get pretty crazy. or be crazy around the house. when we have one of those moments where each one them is making a mess somewhere and going from one to the next, britney will come over and give me that look, already, everybody come in here and huddle up. we form a huddle and everybody puts their hands in the middle like we would on the field or
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something and start kind of doling out responsibilities and bailen, you clean up your legos and bowen clean up why are dinosaur toys and then he runs around and plays with trucks or whatever. mommy will clean up the kitchen and daddy will go downstairs and do the laundry. i go downstairs, i'm looking at my tide plus collection here going, tide plus at the breeze sport or ultrastain release, i've become pretty adept in the laundry room or dishes. i'm part of the team. >> i love that. go team, go. i think it's also incredible how you contributed and/or committed $20 million, that is your goal, to help improve the quality of life for cancer patients and provide care. you balance your love of your sport and your passion for what you do on that field with the passion for new orleans and
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helping others. again is that something you learned in the home, how you were raised? >> i've always been around people that have stressed giving back to others. especially when i'm in such a fortunate position and been having given so much and blessed with so much, it's part of my responsibility to be able to give back to others and give them the opportunities that i know i had when i was a kid. through our foundation we're involved with a lot of children's causes and a lot with rebuilding efforts here in new orleans and helping to rebuild schools and parks and other afterschool mentorship programs. i take just as much pride in that with anything else. >> i'm a dallas cowboy girl from day one of my life but you are an awfully cool guy, your sons are adorable. we can't wait to see the adorable daughter joining the team. keep doing the laundry, britney will be able and dana doset is
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your number one fan. i could not end with saying his name with your face on the screen. go saints, go drew. you are a cool guy and we appreciate you joining us. thank you for everything you do for others. it really is important. thank you. >> thank you. >> i may have to get a drew brees jersey now. i'm tamron hall, up next, "andrea mitchell reports."
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at humana, we believe if healthcare changes, if it becomes simpler... if frustration and paperwork decrease... if grandparents get to live at home instead of in a home... the gap begins to close. so let's simplify things. let's close the gap between people and care. ♪ right now, the price of freedom, the only american p.o.w. from the war in afghanistan, bowe bergdahl back in american hands after being a taliban prisoner for five years. his father who immersed himself in the afghan culture and grew a taliban beard joyously sending a message to bowe in the language of his cap tors. >> bo
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