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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  June 3, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT

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gop favorite. >> robert, thanks so much. that is "all in" for this evening. "the rachel maddow show" starts right now. good evening, rachel. >> good evening, chris. thanks for joining us this hour at home. the invasion of iraq started on march 20th, 2003. march 20th. on march 23rd, 2003, so still during the very first few days of the initial invasion period, on march 23rd, a long column of vehicles from the 3rd infantry division was driving from southern iraq toward baghdad, when a maintenance company got hit by an ambush. with the nation riveted to the start of that war to what was supposed to be the shock and awe application of overwhelming force to what would be a short
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victory. that gave us our first household name. the name was jessica lynch. 19-year-old blonde white female west virginia soldier. but apparently beneath it all, she was a rambo. on april 3rd, 2003, "the washington post" ran this front page story and photo of jessica lynch and told the story of her unbelievable heroism after the ambush on that day three of the iraq war. private jessica lynch rescued tuesday from an iraqi hospital, fought fiercely and thought several iraqi soldiers, firing her weapon until she ran out of ammunition. lynch, a 19-year-old supply clerk, continued firing even after she sustained multiple gun shot wounds. she was fighting to the death. she did not want to be taken
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alive. lynch was also stabbed when iraqi forces closed in on her position said "the washington post." sources told the paper that after her rescue and her medevac, she was being treated for gunshot wounds and stab wounds. the pentagon even managed to obtain night vision video footage of american special forces rushing into an iraqi hospital to rescue her. the coverage of that rescue was unbelievably intense. >> one of the most dramatic moments of this war occurred early wednesday morning iraqi time in the dark. the rescue of private first class jessica lynch of west virginia. nbc's kerry sanders was with the 8th marines when the first tip came in. >> reporter: the rescue operation began with a barrage from the 2nd battalion, 1st marines, firing on baath
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headquarters. that diversion providing cover so special operations forces could drop into saddam hospital just hours before a handwritten note had been smuggled out of the hospital and handed to a marine with the words "she's alive." the note gave the hospital room number where jessica lynch was being held. being hours, army rangers, navy s.e.a.l.s and air force pilots were executing a rescue operation. inside, they found her with a gunshot to her leg. sources say jessica lynch had been for several days at another hospital in this room, her bloody uniform was found. it was torn, her name tag ripped off. tonight, jessica lynch is in germany where she will receive medical treatment before heading home. kerry sanders, nbc news, h. >> later in this broadcast,
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we'll take you to jessica lynch's hometown in west virginia. >> now to the historic story of private first class jessica lynch, the p.o.w. rescued earlier this week. according to "the washington post," she fought fiercely before she was captured, even after she was shot in an ambush and some of her comrades died around her, she kept firing until she ran out of ammunition. one official describes her as fighting to the death. dawn, good morning to you. >> reporter: president lynch is certainly the most celebrated patient here. lynch, and 1400 members, disappeared after being ambushed. military officials say she fought, even while hurt, until she ran out of ammunition. >> it was the first rescue of an american prisoner of war since world war ii. and she was a hero.
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there was even talk of giving jessica lynch the medal of honor. members of congress from her home state of west virginia put her up for the medal of honor, the military's highest honor because of her heroism. she was a mega watt hero. she was brought home safe. her rescue was all captured on film. it could not have been scripted better by hollywood for what they wanted day three of the iraq war to end up like. but it turns out it may not have been scripted by hollywood but it was in fact scripted. the ambush did happen. private first class jessica lynch was injured and spent nine days in an iraqi hospital and she was rescued by american special forces. but the back story of her heroics emptying her weapon, fighting to the death, fighting through gunshot wounds and stab wounds, all of that was made up. as she said from the very beginning. >> when i remember those difficult days, i remember the fear.
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i remember the strength. i remember that hand of that fellow american soldier reassuring me that i was going to be okay. at the same time, tales of agree heroism were being told. at my parent's home in west virginia, it was the media repeating stories a little girl rambo from the hills of west virginia went down fighting. it was not true. i have repeatedly said when asked if the stories about me helped inspire our troops, and rally a nation, perhaps there was some good. however, i'm so confused as to why they chose to lie and tried to make me a legend. >> did you fire your weapon back and did you kill any iraqis? >> no, no. my weapon jammed and i did not shoot, not a -- not a round, nothing. >> you could have just let it go and said nothing. >> i could have, but i'm not
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about to take credit for something that i didn't do. >> jessica lynch was the first american prisoner of war rescued since world war ii. she was grievously injured in that ambush. 11 members of her company died in that ambush, including jessica lynch's best friend, who died next to her in that iraqi hospital in the next bed over. but jessica lynch did not go down shooting. there was not a bloody firefight and stabbing. she was not fighting to the death like that headline said in "the washington post." incidentally, that article has disappeared from the archives. now you can't find it anywhere. it turns out that the group of vehicles that jessica lynch and her company were in, they were supposed to take a detour around the city of nasiriyah, but they didn't. they took a wrong turn or more likely a few wrong turns. and they ended up right in the city center. they were supposed to go around
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the city and not go through it at all. they ended up right in the city center, undefended, and they just drove right into it. it was day three of the war. should that rescue not have happened? should jessica lynch have been left there? seriously, is that what we think about these things now? private first class jessica lynch, sistif the heroics that pentagon made up didn't happen, and they didn't, maybe the special forces who rescued her, maybe they shouldn't have bothered. after all, maybe it was their own screw-up that got them ambushed and hurt and captured in the first place. is that how we think about these things now? is that how we think now about that rescue in hind sight knowing what we know now? because that kind of a case, that obscenity of a case that maybe some americans might deserve to be left behind, that
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the last american prisoner of war, bowe bergdahl, he did not deserve to be freed. that the u.s. government working to free him, succeeding to free him, that was a shame, because yeah, sure, he was an american soldier, but he was a bad one. >> questions this morning of whether sergeant bergdahl was a deserter or potentially a collaborator with the taliban even. pentagon sources confirming to fox that many in the intelligence community have had serious colonncerns that he deserted his post and he may have indeed been working in some way with the enemy. >> it's pretty clear that he was -- looks to me like a deserter or a traitor or both. and why the obama administration would give away five terrorists to get him back is kind of beyond me. again, five americans were killed looking for him at least,
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and i think if anybody needles a phone call or reainsurance or condolen condolences, it's those five families. >> the one that we traded five hardened terrorists for himself deserted, got six americans killed. why are we doing anything to get this guy back? he's ashamed to be an american. he calls america disgusting. he wanted to leave. so he left. he got what he wanted. >> that is the timber of the american right today. as the country celebrated the return of america's only prisoner of war from the war in afghanistan, the right decided to condemn the president for de getting the soldier free, then to condemn the soldier himself. now they have moved on to attacking the soldier's family.
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>> this robert bergdahl, the father, who is also engendering some controversy. he's learned to speak pashto, the language of the taliban and looks like a muslim. he's also somewhat sympathetic to islam, actually thanking allah in front of the president. >> sources are saying they're baffled to allow the president to stand alongside sergeant bergdahl's father. he said he was growing his beard because his son was in captivity. well, your son's out now. so if you really don't want to no longer look like a member of the taliban, you don't have to. are you out of razors? >> on the american right, and republican politics and conservative media, there apparently is nothing to celebrate in an american prisoner of war coming home after five years. because look at his dad. he looks like a muslim.
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the administration's response and the u.s. military's response to all of this has so far been fairly calm, but also pretty forceful. the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff issued a statement saying, the questions about this particular soldier's conduct are separate from any effort, from our effort to recover any u.s. service member in enemy captivity. and he wrote the word "any" in all caps. president obama spoke to the issue today as well on the first leg of his european trip in poland. >> the united states has always had a pretty sacred rule, and that is we don't leave our men or women in uniform behind. and that dates back to the earliest days of our revolution. with respect to the
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circumstances of sergeant bergdahl's capture by the taliban, we obviously have not been interrogating sergeant bergdahl. he's recovering from five years of captivity. with the taliban. but let me just make a very simple point here, and that is regardless of the circumstances, whatever those circumstances may turn out to be, we still get an american soldier back if he's held in captivity, period. full stop. we don't condition that. and that's what every mom and dad who sees a son or daughter sent over into a war theater should expect from not just their commander in chief but the united states of america. >> should we try to get soldiers home when they are held prisoner
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or subject those prisoners and their worthiness for rescue to some sort of test about how they got captured and whether they were negligent or they left their post and they were incompetent or maybe they made a wrong turn or maybe their dad has too long a beard? do we leave no soldier behind in captivity? is that an american military principle? or do we leave some of them behind because some of them aren't worth it? according to the fox news channel? yesterday and today, a political strategist who worked for the george w. bush administration as a staffer and who for a time was mitt romney's foreign policy spokesman, that political operative has been organizing a media strategy to stoke criticism of this soldier, who has just spent five years in enemy hands and is now on his way home. it's an organized effort now to try to organize opposition and
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condemnation of this man who is getting out after five years of captivity. before this happened, you could not invent a hypothetical scenario like this. before this happened, you would have laughed out of the room a would-be screen writer that would have tried to sell you a lot about the freeing of a prisoner of war being treated badly in the united states of america. but incredibly, that is where we are now. [ male announcer ] this is kevin. to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for him, he's agreed to give it up. that's today? [ male announcer ] we'll be with him all day as he goes back to taking tylenol. i was okay, but after lunch my knee started to hurt again. and now i've got to take more pills. ♪ yup. another pill stop. can i get my aleve back yet? ♪ for my pain, i want my aleve. ♪ [ male announcer ] look for the easy-open red arthritis cap.
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the heroic saga of private jessica lynch, captured after bravely fights until she ran out of bullets, shot and stabled, rescued in a midnight raid that boosted morale. >> some brave souls put their lives on the line to make this happen. >> but nbc news found the story was not all it was built up to be. the ambush, "the washington post" initially quoted an unnamed single source identified only as a u.s. official, claiming lynch fought fiercely, firing her weapon until she ran out of ammunition, and then was shot and stabbed. no one from the pentagon ever said on the record that jessica fired her weapon or had been shot. but a steady stream of leaks built a dramatic and false impression. an erroneous report often
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repeated. >> she is reported to have suffered gun shot wounds and broken bones during her ordeal. >> but doctors say private lynch suffered a head injury and broken bones in her leg and back when her truck flipped. she was unconscious when iraqi soldiers and the fedayeen brought her to the hospital. dr. adi said it was clear in the emergency room jessica had neither bullet nor stab wounds. >> with respect to the circumstances of sergeant bergdahl's capture by the taliban, we obviously have not been interrogating sergeant bergdahl. he's recovering from five years of captivity. with the taliban. he's having to undergo a whole battery of tests and he's going to have to undergo a significant transition back into a life he
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has not even met with his family yet, which indicates the degree to which we take this transition process seriously. something that we learned from the vietnam era. but let me just make a very simple point here, and that is regardless of the circumstances, whatever those circumstances may turn out to be, we still get an american soldier back after being held in captivity, period, full stop. we don't condition that. >> private jessica lynch was the first american p.o.w. rescued after world war ii. the initial story that the pentagon told about jessica lynch about her actions surrounding how she ended up in captivity turned out to be a maid for tv super hero story that jessica lynch herself was the loudest in pointing out that it wasn't true. none of that ever tempered the happiness that greeted the return home of private first
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class jessica lynch and the gratefulness that she was rescued and that she made it. this week there has been a remarkable turn of political events surrounding the return home of an american pritzer in from the war in afghanistan. it's a deafening chor rouse on the right that bringing that pritzer in of war home was a mistake. that the president should not have made the deal he made, and the soldier himself under the circumstances which he was captured mean that the president and the country basically should have left him behind. i thought honestly from personal perspective that there might be one ugly hour of this kind of thing in the comment sections of the lesser blogs of the world when this story first broke. but this has now turned into a full-on three-day uproar on the right that appears to be an official republican action on this subject. this appears to be their new political cause celeb. it is an issue growing larger as
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we speak. i'm flummoxed by this. joining us is patrick murray who served in the 82nd airborne, and he's the host of "taking the hill" here on msnbc. great to have you here. patrick, let me ask you what you make of the criticism on the right, not just of bowe bergdahl and the circumstances under which he was captured, but criticism of president obama for arranging his rescue. >> it's pretty disheartening, rachel, because they're purposefully conflating two issues. the one issue of bringing home a missing soldier back to america is clear. we have one standard in the military, no one is left behind. no one. and to have them criticize the commander in chief for following the military standard, which is very clear. now, they're conflating the fact that the sergeant may have been a deserter.
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i'll give you that. let's get him healed up. let's investigate it. and if that's the case, let's court-martial him. but the fact is this, let's court-martial him here in america where he belongs. we don't outsource our justice to the taliban. >> did the president fulfill his obligations in terms of the way he handled the prisoner exchange? one of the remarks the president made is this is part of what happens when wars end and cited presidents going back to lincoln in terms of the way other countries have arranged prisoner exchanges at the end of long conflicts. is the way the president approached this in keeping with that history, as well? >> it's keeping with the finest military tradition of our commander in chief, rachel. the republicans' criticism, saying that barack obama's negotiating with terrorists,
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let's be very clear. he was negotiating and talking through our allies in the country of qatar and the qataris. secondly, they want to have selective amnesia, when the fact is the bush administration literally, not just negotiated, but paid the sons of iraq in the anbar province, ones responsible for killing american soldiers, to get a strangle hold and force al qaeda in iraq. so that is what is so infuriating here. let's bring this american g.i. home. let's heal him up, and let's -- if he desertsed, if that's the facts, let's court-martial here and bring him to justice. but to say the commander in chief did the wrong thing and to attack him way is conflating the issues, like they did by the way, as you know, as you pointed out, with jessica lynch. jessica lynch, great soldier, not a rambo.
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she never lied. she had the moral courage and fortitude, though, rachel, to come forward and let people know that they are lying about her record. and i give her credit for that. >> patrick, let me ask you one last question, it is a political question. as you say, there isn't a reason to conflate the actions of sergeant bergdahl and the wisdom and the ethics of whether or not he should have been brought home as an american soldier in captivity. on the former question, though, the military says it's going to open a new round of investigation, a new investigation into the circumstances under which he was taken. is that the sort of thing at this point, which is now necessarily going to be infected with the sort of politics, that have attended this decision to free him from afghanistan or do you have any concerns that that can be fairly adjudicated given the way this has turned into a huge firestorm on the right now? >> the fact that they're bringing such a big deal that
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we're bringing an american g.i. home. and in the facts come out that he may have been aiding the taliban, potentially, because no one knows the case, of course that trial is going to be very political charged. now, i have confidence in the military justice system, they'll select a jury, all that stuff. but i can only imagine. luckily, barack obama, president obama does not make the decision whether he's tried or court-martialed or not, that's in the chain of command of the sergeant. >> patrick murphy, iraq war vet, former congressman, host of "taking the hill" here on msnbc, the next new installment airs june 22, thank you for being with us. >> thanks, rachel. not every senate primary campaign results in four arrests, actual arrests by the police and mug shots before the voting happens. but that means this year is just a little special. that story is ahead. than the reviews said.
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today we renew a bill that would help bring a community back into the marges of american democracy. my administration will enforce the provisions of the law and will defend it in court. [ applause ] i am proud to sign the voting rights act reauthorization and amendment acts of 2006. [ applause ] >> when congress renewed the voting rights act in 2006, the house vote was 390-33 in favor. those 33 no's were all republican members of congress, but 192 republicans voted for the voting rights act, including the top two republicans in the house today, john boehner and eric cantor both voted for it. and george w. bush, president george w. bush signing it proudly and said we will defend it in court. in the senate, the voting was
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unanimous. zero senators voted against reauthorizing the voting act in 2006. that signing ceremony was one big bipartisan garden party. the consensus was clear. the particular question of the civil rights era had been decided. last year, the u.s. supreme court gutted the voting rights act. in the course of the debate, justice scalia said using a lot of rights in places that had a history of denying those -- said it had become racial entitlement in this country. in a 5-4 vote, the court voted to gut the voting rights act. immediately, immediately, that same day, states that had been stymied by the voting rights act
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in the past, those states announced they would put into place the restrictions they had been waiting for. texas, north carolina, mississippi, they all moved to put in place restrictions on voting rights they had always wanted but had always been blocked. policies like requiring i.d. that black and hispanic voters were less likely to have, or cutting the days for early voting that were favored by black churches. something else happened after that supreme court decision that was really interesting to watch. no main stream republicans wanted to be seen as cheering too hard for what the court had done, even though it was the five republican appointed justices who made up the majority in that decision. a few key republicans in congress said they wanted to put some of the votes rights act back into place. eric cantor had begun joining congressman john lewis on his pilgrimage to alabama.
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he had marched in the 1960s. he was beaten so badly he was nearly killed trying to cross the bridge in selma, alabama for voting rights. congressman cantor joined john lewis on his annual pilgrimage back to alabama in 2013 and again in 2014. the night the supreme court ruled against the voting rights act, eric cantor cited his pro-found experience john lewis in alabama. he said, i'm hopeful congress will put politics aside as we did on that trip and find a reasonable path forward then sures that the sacred obligation of voting in this country remains protected. eric cantor said he was on board for finding some sort of reasonable path forward from day one. then in january, a bipartisan group of lawmakers put forward legislation to restore the voting rights act. the bill made a big exception for state laws that require voters to show new forms of i.d.
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the bill sponsors reportedly did that to attract support from eric cantor. they even left his home state of virginia off the list of states that need special attention. this bill was a valentine to eric cantor trying to get him on board, since he's the guy who decides what the house votes on and what they don't. for all of their courtship, what they got was nothing. the bipartisan bill to shore up the voting rights act has been referred to committee and there it languishes. while that committee chairman seems to be in no hurry to do anything with it. and congressman cantor says he's continuing to have conversations about the bill. so with the old protections gone, today, two of the states that went ahead with new voting restrictions once the voting right acting was gone, two of those states sent people to the polls today under those new restrictions that they couldn't get away with before. in alabama, this maiden voyage
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occasioned a $1,000 bounty offered by the alabama republican party for tips leading to convictions of voter fraud and promised to have republican vote watchers. a 93-year-old man in coastal alabama is reported to have been turned away because he did not have the kind of i.d. you need to have to vote in that state. next door in mississippi, voters went to the polls for the first time with new requirements. mississippi might be the most important race in the nation right now in the republican primary. chris mcdaniel represents the tea party's last best chance this year to unseat a republican senator. over the closing days of the race, he's shared the stump with republican leading rights, like sarah palin and rick santorum are. he's challenging thad cochran in the primary and the polling
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showed they were separated by only a few points. it's just been a crazy race in mississippi. four people were arrested last month in connection with a bizarre alleged gross scheme to sneak into a nursing home and take pictures of thad cochran's infirmed wife to use those pictures in a hit piece. four people arrested, all supporters of chris mcdaniel, including his former radio show co-host. this week mississippians have been wondering which mystery group placed an ad calling for democratic voters to cross over and vote for senator thad cochran. you don't have to be a democrat or republican primary voter. it's an open primary. also, it's open season in mississippi right now. right wing tea party outside groups spent more than $5 million on this primary trying
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to unseat thad cochran and trying to prove that the tea party still can win elections, still can claim the scalp of long-time incumbent republicans. the polls closed in mississippi at 7:00 p.m. local time, so just over an hour ago. you have to cross the 50% threshold to avoid a runoff. just 29% of the precincts reporting. when it's that close, it becomes relevant that there's a third candidate in the race. the threshold to avoid the runoff is 50%. joining us now is casey hunt, joining us from thad cochran's campaign headquarters in mississippi. thank you for your time tonight. right now, it's neck and neck as it gets. what's the mood there among the senator's campaign?
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>> the mood here is nervous, but cautiously optimistic. i think there's acknowledgement that the senator could lose this race, and we're picking up a few early indications there might be some finger pointing starting to go on about what exactly happened here. the cochran campaign has sort of had a difficult road all along. he wasn't sure initially if he was going to run or not. he announced somewhat unexpectedly and at that point the establishment in mississippi sort of rose up around him to try and push him through to the finish line. but it may have within too little too late. as you pointed out, this is a real test for these outside groups. they've lost almost every runoff. if they won here, it would be a major blow. but if they pull this out and it's looking like they very well might, that's going to shift the dynamics of this race. in particular, democrats are
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looking at travis childress, a former congressman, and i don't think it's out of the question that national democrats would go all in for him and try to put this team in play in the fall. >> in terms of the outside groups that have been involved here, i just mentioned that remarkable figure for the senate primary, in a state like mississippi, $5 million alone spent by outside groups by chris mcdaniel trying to unseat thad cochran. are they trying to spin tonight's results? are they reacting or positioning themselves in terms of what they think the results are going to be like? >> at this point, neither side, and i've talked to supporters of mcdaniel, cochran supporters. no one at this point has any idea how this race is going to come out. as you pointed out, it could go to a runoff. on the outside groups, while
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there are a lot of tea party groups in this race, the most significant player has -- this is going to be a real test for them in particular. i wouldn't necessarily they say line up with all of the other tea party groups. they've been around a little bit longer, but they pick their spots a little more carefully. they've got a lot riding on this race. >> casey hunt, nbc political reporter joining us from jackson, mississippi. this is going to be a fun one to watch. thanks for helping us to understand it. >> thanks, rachel. much more ahead tonight. stay with us and keep an eye on those election results. oh, no, ! let me get it. uh-uh-uh. i don't want you to pay for this. it's not happening, honey. let her get it. she got her safe driving bonus check from allstate last week. and it's her treat. what about a tip? oh, here's one... get an allstate agent. nice! [ female announcer ] switch today and get two safe driving bonus checks a year
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in 2005, rick santorum undertook that unavoidable right and wrote a book. his book was called "it takes a family." get it? because hillary clinton had written her book titled "it takes a village." so rick santorum wanting to be the anti-hillary clinton he turned it into "it takes a family" and the book explains his take on the evils and the disease ridden nature of sex outside of marriage. he explains how feminism
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undermines the traditional family. his book was hailed by people like televangelist particularly reviewer said, departing from the my life genre, santorum barely mentions his personal history. it is a thoughtful articulation of public policy with real life examples and practical solutions. so wrote rick santorum's own lawyer. who had the honor of authoring that book review for a christian magazine. rick santorum's lawyer and personal book reviewer is a man named david porter. the pennsylvania attorney went on to defend mr. santorum in a residencely dispute, the re-election effort, rick santorum lost by a staggering 18 points. a defeat mr. santorum amaze
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league parlayed into what is now a permanent career for him of being a guy who is always kind of running for president of the united states. vote for me, the last time people elected me, the same group kicked me out by 18 points. next time they got a chance at me. meanwhile, mr. santorum's lawyer, david porter here, went on to bigger and better things as well including being reported as a legitimate candidate for a laf time lifetime appointment. david porter mentioned as a package deal with a group of judges to be appointed by president obama to fill one of the many, many judicial vacancies which remain after 5 1/2 years of the president trying to apin tpoint people as judges and never letting anybody come up for a vote. mr. porter's nomination is part of the package deal. it drew very concerned attention from liberal groups in pennsylvania. who reacted negatively to news that a democratic president might be appointing this conservative activist to a lifetime appointment on the federal bench. they highlighted his background as a social conservative
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activist as leader of the pittsburgh lawyer's chapter of the federalist society as trustee of a conservative group, center for vision and values. liberal groups in pennsylvania gathered 40,000 signatures in opposition to the nomination of the guy who had yet to actually to be nominated to anything. today the huffington post reported david porter will not be nominated to the federal bench as part of a package deal of conservative, not conservative nominees to try to get them through the senate. chock one up for the pennsylvania liberals on this one. but this package deal thing isn't happening just in pennsylvania. it is happening all over the place. david porter isn't the only potential nominee in this sa theiry w -- scenario who has come under fire. the georgia appeals court judge, michael boggs one of president obama's picks for the federal court. he too is not a conventional choice for president obama or for any democratic president. when michael boggs was a georgia state legislator he voted for a constitutional amendment banning
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same-sex marriage. he voted against changing georgia's state flag to drop its confederal imagery. he was also in the georgia house in 2001. when a bill was brought to the floor that would have created a public registry, posting the names of doctors who have done abortions and the abortions they have performed. at the time there was intense debate about whether or not this was a safe thing to do for those doctors. >> you heard about these, these, clinics being bombed and these people being shot and if word goes out, this very well could cause -- in fact i had a leading republican say, we have a right to life, not this kind of thing. >> well, i guess, i guess that's -- i mean if we took that kind of approach in everything -- then, then we would have difficulty in passing everything, there are some radical folks out there, and i agree with that. >> how many appendectomy doctors do you know, clinics have been
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bombed. a baby, pediatricians, or heart specialists, let's be realistic about it. i mean -- >> i am i you take the approach. this is a real thing. if you put out on the internet that the people have performed abortions, next thing you know, some of the radicals will want to shoot them. kill them. bomb them. it's going on. it is the real world. >> it's going on. it's the real world. that's audio from the 2001 georgia house debate about that public registry of abortion providers. put out, at huffington post last week. it is now, newly relevant to michael boggs' nomination as a federal judge. when the bill would have created an online registry of addresses and names of abortion providers in the state. when that bill was voted down, michael boggs, democratic state legislator at the time was among those in favor of it. he voted in favor of creating the public registry of abortion doctors. when he was asked about that vote, during his nomination hearings, a couple of weeks ago in the senate, mr. boggs pleaded
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ignorance. he hadn't realized any body had targeted abortion doctors with violence. he never heard of that. whennen ehe voted to publish a registry of their name. we have heard the debate now. we know that he has heard about that violence. heard about it at the time he cast the vote. and he voted the way he did anyway. he says he has heard about that violence against doctors and changed his mind on the issue. that idea, that, that vote he took to make an online registry of abortion doctors names. that idea is not just a georgia thing, that is haunting one judicial nominee who now says he changed his mind on the subject a few years down the line. not just him. not just georgia. in the great state of louisiana, the state government there has just overwhelmingly voted to do the same thing. to form essentially a public registry of abortion providers. this isn't a decade ago like it was in georgia. this is now. the new louisiana legislation specifically forces some doctors in private practice who do abortions to register with the state as abortion providers. their names and their locations
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literally, the addresses where they work and where they can be found, that would all be publicly posted information by order of the state. yeah, hey, i wonder what people use that list for. that bill passed the louisiana senate. then it sailed through the louisiana house last week. it passed by a margin of 88-5. with zero debate. same bill also expected to close three if not four of the state's five remaining abortion clinics. using the same kind of targeted regulation that has shut down clinic as cross ts across the c. the bill, sitting on the governor's desk. after the legislation passed the governor was looking forward to sign it and a signing ceremony expected sometime soon. this idea of making lists of abortion providers, making public details about where they work, phone numbers, photos of who they are and huh they can be found. it is not a new idea. it has long been a tactic of anti-abortion extremist groups. people who were to do harm to doctors who perform abortions or
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at lest to intimidate and scare them. the lists were frequently made in the form of old-fashioned wanted posters. this for example is the wanted poster for wichita doctor, george tiller, giving his home and office address where he can be found. the wanted poster was before he was shot by an anti-abortion activist, in 1993. dr. tiller survived that assassination attempt, went back to work one day later, bandages and all. but ultimately another anti-abortion activist, stalked dr. tiller at his church. on a sunday morning went into the church and shot and killed dr. tiller inside the church. may 31, 2009, five years ago this week. it is arguable that dr. tiller was the most visible abortion provider in the country name and face was on every anti-abortion personal list, and now would be a state sanctioned list of the doctors willing to provide abortions in the state even as the state rid itself of almost all of its clinics and
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simultaneously sitting before the senate is a federal judicial nominee who fried to do the same thing for his home state when he had a vote on the matter. will that nomination survive? watch this space. and with the quicksilver card from capital one, you earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on everything you purchase. not just "everything at the hardware store." not "everything, until you hit your cash back limit." quicksilver can earn you unlimited 1.5% cash back on everything you could possibly imagine. say it with me -- everything. one more time, everything! and with that in mind... what's in your wallet? and with that in mind... honestly, the off-season isn't i've got a lot to do. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with. alright, russell you are good to go!
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