tv Andrea Mitchell Reports MSNBC October 9, 2014 9:00am-10:01am PDT
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only thing like this is aids. we have to work now so this is not the world's next aids. speed is the most important variable here. this is controllable. >> a survey showing what you think should be done. letting kobani fall. saving kobani is not part of the strategy as isis gains more control of the border town near turkey. >> why now? why is the u.s. after three weeks of watching isis build up and attack kobani is the u.s. paying a lot of attention? >> who was hillary clinton talking about to a hometown audience last night? >> i have a history with charismatic attractive men who just wear me out.
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good day, everyone. the family of thomas eric duncan is calling for an investigation into his death. questions have been raised about whether he would have died. could he have survived if the dallas hospital treated him immediately rather than sending him home for several days. his body will be cremated under strict protocols. the sheriff's deputy who served with a quarantine order has been admitted to the hospital. a cautionary note there. in omaha, doctors are hoping that the american photojournalist working with nbc shows signs of improvement after receiving a blood transfusion from the ebola survivor. airports preparing to screen passengers arriving from west
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africa. >> currently there is screening by local authorities in the three affected countries of people getting on aircraft and at the airports outbound at the beginning of the journey. what we want to do is put in additional more active screening at points of arrival as well. we are having good discussions with the airlines about contributing to this. >> we are covering all of the angles. we have luke russert and the director of the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases. the president of simusa. luke is going to start screening passengers for ebola next week. how is this going to work? >> reporter: it's something that is unprecedented in modern american history. essentially when passengers come from one of the three countries in west africa, they will be in fact brought into a special
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screening area where their temperature will be taken with a hands free thermometer. if they have a fever, they will be brought before a medical official to determine whether or not they should be released or go directly to a medical facility for further evaluation. even if they don't show signs of a fever, they can determine whether or not they have been exposed in west africa. contact information will be taken and they will be told to look for symptoms for up to 21 days. they have to contact the hospital and give them information from the customs and cdc officials here at the screening sites. this will be 110 passengers a day. 94% come through the five airports that you mentioned. there is a really reasoning to calm public fear. charles schumer has been an advocate. when you look at what this does,
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there problems. number one, it's very easy to take an aspirin and alleviate the symptoms. who is to say the passenger will be truthful talking about exposure. they may not want to be part of the database and be hasselled about where they were. from that area, 1/5 of the people who come on these flights are going to have a fever because of malaria. will this cause unrest that may not need to be here and put fear in the public? perhaps, but officials believe it's better to have them in place because it calms fears and give us this idea that we are more secure around the borders. >> thank you so much and joining me now for more about the public concerns and the health issues. director of the national institute of allergies and diseases. what if someone takes an aspirin
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or has malaria. how is this going to work? >> after you see that hypothetical, nothing is absolutely 100%, but the fact is that this is an additional layer of screening that could help even narrow down more to a very, very small likelihood that there would be someone who would get in here who actually does have ebola. the number of people who are going to be coming across a relatively few, when you look at the exit screening that takes place in west africa over the last couple of months about 36,000 people were screened. 77% of them had fever and were detained and looked at and none have ebola. you are talking about a very, very small number, but that extra layer is something that alleviates the fears of the american people. it might catch that very, very rare person who actually slips through the exit screening.
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that's the reason why it's being implemented. for those reasons. i wouldn't worry about someone taking an aspirin or tylenol. you are dealing with a very, very small fraction. >> there was an experience in newark when the passenger was vomiting and there was concern and he turned out to be fine and not ebola, but there was chaos. they were not prepared. the people on the plane had gone through and passed through customs and couldn't figure out how to get them back. there logistical questions at the airports. we know what they are like on a good day. >> that's true. there was a bit of that, but these things happen as you go along and get these experiences, you learn important lessons. for example, the issue that happened in dallas when mr. duncan was not first recognized, that will for sure
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not happen again. nothing it perfect. i think the lesson learned will be important and hopefully they will be more smooth in the future. >> i wanted to share a sur fay that they did with an online survey, not a poll. we have data about people's attitudes. 30% of those questioned were worried. 63% not worried. as we began to dig deeper in the survey, we found that people were aware this is not airborne. that is a tribute to you and the media and not raising people's alarms. people did have worry. 51% were worried about an outbreak and 44% not worried. a large number wanted the
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airport screenings. 74% were in favor of that. only 8% not in favor. there was a high percentage of people who wanted the use to be more active in west africa. 46% saying yes we should be more active and helping and 12% not. that's an interesting take on public opinion. >> clearly some people are worried. the percentages are reasonable given the fact that this at least from the viewpoint of the public is a scary disease. the idea that a very large and think the biggest percentage that you mentioned were for people who felt there should be this extra layer of screening. that's one of the reasons why and not the only reason, but one of the reasons of doing it was to alleviate concern as well as substantive reason for how it might help. as i mentioned a moment ago, narrow further the likelihood
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that someone gets by. as far as what we are doing, we are active in africa in trying to keep this suppressed and eliminat eliminated. i hope the american people appreciate. the best way to protect america is to suppress the epidemic in the countries. that's what the united states is playing the leadership in doing. >> i wanted to ask you a quick medical question about the treatment that we know. dr. kent bradley has donated his blood to the free lance cameraman who was working for nbc who is being treated. it offered his blood as well to the man that mr. duncan sadly died and he wasn't a match, but he is a good match with the journalist. we assume that the blood because of antibodies might be helpful?
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we don't know what is going to work. is that correct? >> we don't know. hypothetically it could work. we don't know what the protection is. the same experiment has been tried with a monkey that was vaccinate and given to another monky and it did not protect it. that doesn't mean that transfusing plasma from a human who is recovering into someone who is sick may not help. it might. as you pointed out, we do not know that. a clinical study will have to be done to see if that approach works. >> thank you so much. a very busy time for you. we appreciate you taking the time. thank you for being with us. >> good to be with you. >> turning to isis, canada is monitoring hundreds of people who traveled or tried to travel
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to syria and talking about carrying out attacks here in north america. the u.s.-led coalition pounds targets near turkey. 23 strikes in the last 36 hours alone, but not enough to make a difference according to those on the ground. chief foreign correspondent richard engle is in turkey with the fight against isis. what we are hearing in boston from secretary kerry is that kobani is not a priority. they are letting the town fall and most importantly, turkey is doing nothing because of the syrian kurds who are the population base there, enemies as far as the leader of turkey is concerned. he is more suspicious of the kurds than of isis. >> the situation in kobani from the global perspective may not
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be the most important city in the world. there other key cities in syria. but it's an important symbol and highly visible and perhaps secretary kerry is being tone deaf to the importance that kobani has taken on on social media. cities are being attacked, but nobody can see them. people are watching the city fall almost in realtime and troops are sitting a few helped yards away doing nothing. they had cannons pointed at kobani and they are not firing. american harps had not been doing much. there seems to be something changing despite secretary kerry's statements that kobani is not that important. the message is sinking in because as you mentioned, there
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have been 23 air strikes around kobani. that's more than there have been around the area in the last three weeks. he might be saying it's not that important, but i think the u.s. is getting the message that this is a very visible and symbolic target that has a lot of people incredibly upset. about 21 people have been killed in riots because of kobani. that domestic unrest is not over yet. maybe it's not the only city in syria that is under attack by isis, but it certainly has an overweighted experience because of visibility. >> there is a heart breaking letter or message that was tweeted to isis from the mother peter c
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peter kassig. she said i am trying to get in touch about my son's fate. i am an old woman and he is my only child. my husband and i are on our own with no help from the government. we would like to talk to you. how can we reach you? we saw her on camera earlier with a head scarf and her husband pleading with them to save him. we know that isis has not been listening to pleas, but this is just another heart breaking example of the hour and the propaganda value of what they are doing. i think we want to thank richard for his report also from turkey. protests have erupted on the southside of st. louis overnight and another deadly officer-involved shooting. police say an off duty officer was fired on by an 18-year-old and he returned fire, killing the suspect. after the shooting, a large
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crowd gathered to protest. the incident occurred on the eve of demonstrations scheduled to take place in nearby ferguson over the fatal schools of teenage michael brown. you are watching andrea mitchell reports on msnbc. h bars handy. it's my favorite bar hands down. from the makers of metamucil, new multi-health meta health bars have natural psyllium fiber that helps promote heart health with a taste consumers prefer. would you like one of these instead? yummy - thanks! experience the meta effect with our new multi-health wellness line and see how one small change can lead to good things. t's the problem?
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it's reliable. just like kung pao fish. thank you, ping. reliably fast internet starts at $89.95 a month. comcast business. built for business. the latest in a string of eye-opening stories about the secret service from "the washington post." we go back to the 2012 prostitution scandal in columbia and raises the question of how much aides knew at the time about this embarrassment. joining me now for the daily fix, contributor and managing editor and "washington post" editorial columnist, ruth
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marcus. she has got information from the secret service and the house investigators that the white house was told and the council's office was told that a volunteer advance man, the son of a well-known contributor also had someone in his room overnight who was listed online as a prostitute and this was known and reported to the white house. there is hanger in the ranks. how come the advance team was not punished for doing the same thing that the agents were. in defense of the advance team, secret service had a much higher level of information and security responsibility for the president and the advance team. that said, this tells you something about why there is bad blood. >> bad blood and questions about whether the white house was adequately forth coming when it was questioned about this. >> there could have been a cover up and this was right before the
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election. >> right. i think what is striking about this story is that it's part of the larger narrative of what in the world is going on with the secret service and maybe more broughtly with the house. >> the response is as was reported more than two years ago, they conducted an sbrnl review that did not identify inappropriate behavior. they requested they send over information related to personnel engaging in inappropriate conduct and that is how the log emerge and a version of which proved to falsely implicate an agent who was clear and there was no white house interference with an ig investigation. although there is implication that there was interference with the ig report and the members of the team ended up leaving as a result. >> there are quotes in there that suggest that at least some
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people felt as though there was a desire to keep any of this information out of the public eye until after the election. as you mentioned, this happened in the midst of the 2012 election. that may be the nub of all of this. we always talk about this is an alleged or potential recover up. it could be almost always the case worse than the crime. if there was election consideration there which is being alleged by at least one person in carol's story, that is problematic. for a white house who insisted that no one was implicated in this and nothing was done wrong. this was secret service agents acting badly and when they found out, the white house punished those responsible. if that starts to fray, it's
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obviously damaging for them. >> i wanted to share with you, hillary clinton in chicago, her original hometown, speaking at the economic club and talked about when she first met with president obama and he offered her the job of secretary of state. >> in my discussions with him after he offered me the job here in chicago and i said no and i said no again and i said no again and finally i just gave in and as i said to somebody the other day, i told my husband no and i wouldn't get married and no, and just gave in. i have a history with charismatic attractive men who just wear me out. >> wow. i guess i might get myself in trouble, but no sometimes means yes. whey thought was striking was the degree to which she is
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almost this this post feminist role. she can say anything. she doesn't have to worry about looking strong enough. she can say these guys swept me off my feet and no one needs to worry about whether she won't be strong enough to stand up to vladimir putin. >> when you become a grandmother it frees you up to say anything. >> it's interesting because she was so resistant to talk about anything about being a woman in the 2008 campaign really. she stayed away from it for fear of people saying well, what about in the moment where you are staring down vladimir putin. it is a change. she talked much more openly about the historic nature if she was to run again and how important it is for women to be in leadership positions and elsewhere.
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the last speech she gave, the however many, 50 million cracks in the invisible ceiling, that is the leading edge of what looks like a 2016 campaign. >> thank you very much to both of you and hang in with me because i want to show you something completely different. a blending of the old and the new. google is taking the camera into uncharted territory. they strapped it on the back of a 10-year-old camel and went for a walk in the desert. they used the camel, the ancient mote of transport for authenticity, but the pictures are just great. you pay your auto insurance premium every month on the dot. you're like the poster child for paying on time. and then one day you tap the bumper of a station wagon. no big deal... until your insurance company jacks up your rates. you freak out. what good is having insurance if you get punished for using it?
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the outbreak in west africa. they are looking at a catastrophe if it's not contained. the organization overseeing more than half of the ebola beds in liberia. thank you very much for being with us. you have done so much and we have a survey now with survey monkey that indicates americans by a large number among those surveyed online want to do more for west africa. there is a real sense of not abandoning this vital part of the world that is suffering. tell me how your people are doing. we have been impressed with dr. brantley agreeing and donating his blood ask offering to donate his blood to mr. dunk an in dallas, but it wasn't a match. >> apparently so. both of our missionaries, rick and nancy are willing to donate
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if it's a match. that's an encouraging report that you gave. the american people which is very typical of us willing to give when others are hurting. that encourages me today. thank you. i really appreciate that. we have over 220 workers serving in a hospital in the ebola unit there in monrovia. great news last week. one of our nurses who contracted ebola there recovered from ebola. tested negative. we are so grateful to be able to see that all of our workers survived this deadly disease. >> there is concern though that the infrastructure in liberia and the governmental institutions of collapsing. can you speak to that? supplies are backed up in container ships and not being
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distributed properly. >> it is a situation where we are trying to get materials in and the container ships were stopping for a while and then they opened back up and they may be closing down now. this is a difficult situation that is really changing by the hour. yes, you are absolutely right. the medical infrastructure was decimated because of the civil wars and they have not been able to recover from that. add to that financial pressures and then you add on to this this wildfire of ebola makes if are a difficult situation for the country. that's why we are committed to it. we have been there since our mid 50s. we plan to continuing to be there to serve the people of liberia. >> and can you update us on the doctor who had some sort of a congestion. is he all right? >> he is.
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think of the worst virus that you ever had and multiply that. that's what he suffered from. he was experiencing a nagging cough, he went in to get that check and of course during this heightened period they were very thorough with him and he was able to be released 24 hours later and he needs to rest and get his immune system built back up and return some of that energy that he is known for. >> bruce johnson, thank you so much. thank you for your service and for all of your people there. we really are grateful as a country. >> thank you, andrea. so appreciate that. >> one of new york city's landmark that is a lot of us know is about to be the most expensive hotel ever sold. a chinese insurance company is paying just under $2 billion for the waldorf astoria. that is $1.4 million per room key. it has been the destination of
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presidents and world diplomats including the chinese in 1974 when they met there with then secretary of state henry kissinger. it is the official residence of the ambassador to the united nations and her family live on the 42nd floor. that's an embassy residence overlooking park avenue. considering china's cyber war, can only assume once beijing buys the building, they will have to move to a more secure and perhaps less luxurious location. it's also where president obama and the secretary of state stay in new york. this is msnbc. and that became our passion. to always build something better, airplanes that fly cleaner and farther on less fuel. that redefine comfort and connect the world like never before. after all, you can't turn dreams into airplanes unless your passion for innovation is nonstop. ♪
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it's a pretty tough ad. home to a critical race this fall. scott brown's decision to challenge senator jean shaheen has fate the from isis to women's health. brown had a quick response that ad on his record. >> you may have seen that the senator is running an ad calling into question my support for women's health care. i want you to know the facts. i'm pro choice. i support continued funding for planned parenthood and i believe women should have access to contraception. after six years of voting with president obama, he distracted them from the record. >> a hole has shaheen holding a
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six-point lead. 17% are undecided. it's no wonder that women's issues are prominent. she has a double-digit lead with women with election day only a few weeks away. thank you very much. this is a tough race. >> nice to be with you. good to see you. women are a key component. women have a storied role in elected toll ticks among democratic office holders right now. in new hampshire. me about the key that you think women will play if you are to hold your seat. >> women will be important and we want to point out the differences between me and scott brown on so many issues that women care about. on pay equity. women should get equal pay for equal work. scott brown voted price against legislation that encourage pay
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equity. scott brown on reproductive choice, you have to look at his record. it has not supported reproductive health care for women. despite what he said, he introduced that legislation that said women have to look at color photos of developing fetuses and i don't think that is a decision about abortion that the government or scott brown or anybody else ought to tell women. it's a decision that women with their families and their providers should make on their own. >> this race is getting personal. one of scott brown's daughters have written an op ed saying jeanne should be ashamed of herself. the attack she's running against my dad is to scare women. care to respond? >> it's not flat out wrong. the fact is that is his record.
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introduced the legislation and cosponsored it not once, but twice in the house in massachusetts and when she was in the senate. when he was in the senate in washington representing massachusetts. he doesn't just support it, he cosponsored the amendment that said any employer could deny employees for moral reasons that they might have access to health care benefits. it was aimed at contraceptive coverage. in the summer when the supreme court took up the hobby lobby decision and said that employers should have been able to deny employees access to birth control, scott brown applauded that decision. if you support women's reproductive choices, you don't support or applaud the hopi lobby decision. i introduced legislation that would reverse the decision in the hobby lobby case.
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this should not be an issue that we are still fighting about. unfortunately despite what scott brown wants to say to women, that's not what his record has been. >> i want to ask you about president obama because he hasn't been campaigning in a lot of states. people have not been inviting him. would you rather have president obama campaign for you or one of the clintons? >> we have hillary clinton coming up and former president clinton is going to be here next week for the jefferson jackson dinner. they will be here and i'm delighted to have their support and helping us. at this point in the campaign, we want to turn out everybody we can. new hampshire has a very big percentage drop off between the presidential year and non-presidential year. what we want is team to know there is an election coming up november 4th and get out and vote. >> and having the president come
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would not be helpful? >> well, the president is dealing with a lot of crisis in the world right now. i think it's important for him to continue to address what's happening with isis and continue to address the ebola scare. i expect him to be in washington. >> thank you very much. former governor and current senator jeanne shaheen. raising questions. is there a health risk in the turf? >> the nurse said tell my you guys are goalkeepers. you are like the fourth goalkeeper i hooked up this week. great rates and safety working in harmony. open an optimizer +plus account from synchrony bank. visit myoptimizerplus.com to open an account. service. security. savings. synchrony bank engage with us.
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[ male announcer ] ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. ask your doctor if viagra is right for you. welcome back. parents are going to want to pay close attention to this story about artificial turf that comes closer to anything has before to look like natural grass. the industry and school district said it's safe. researchers and athletes believe
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more research needs to be done into whether it could have health effects on kids and pro athletes from the composite ingredients. here an nbc news investigation. >> casey sullivan may have taken a soccer game like this for granted if he never got the diagnosis. >> the doctor came in and said in maimonides years of medical practice, this is the worst chest x-ray i have seen. >> hodgkin's lymphoma stage 4. a young fit goalkeeper. >> years later, he saw a soccer coach, amy griffin on the local news. two of her goalkeepers were diagnosed with similar cancers. a terrible coincidence until taking one for chemotherapy. >> the nurse said don't me you guys are goalkeepers.
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she said that is crazy. you are like the fourth this week. i have a feeling it has something to do with the black dots. >> this is the stuff everybody is talking about. >> it is shredded car and truck tires used in fields to fill the space between artificial blades of grass. they contain the chemicals found in tires. they label four carcinogens atting at low levels they are considered safe. on a soccer field, goalkeepers more than any other player roll around every practice. >> you end up ingesting the rubber accidentally as a goalkeeper, it's unavoidable. >> he reached out and now he is on the list, names the coach continues to gather of soccer players with different cancer. 38 all and 34 are goalkeepers. it's not scientific proof and there is no research directly
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linking it to cancer. >> many are blood or lymph cancers, but it's difficult to study the relationship. >> no available studies replicate coal keepers's playing conditions, but many defend the turf safety. davis sits on the council board. >> there is certainly a pe pond rans preponderance of the evidence that said it is safe. >> advocacy groups say more research should be done. >> turf fields come with a member of risks and a number of real benefits. every community that is faced with deciding what they want to put in as to weigh the different risks and benefits.
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>> among the studies the surf council points to is done by the epa in 2009. the agency itself describes the conclusions as limited. they repeatedly requested an interview, but after several e-mails and two phone calls, the epa refused. the spokesperson said the use of rubber remains a state and local decision. more testing needs to be done. >> if more research needs to be done, why are we allowing our children to play on this surface? >> more research can always be done. the question is whether or not the turf is safe. we have 14 studies on the website that said we can find no negative health effects. >> pro athletes and school kids are playing on more than 5,000 fields around the country. parks and schools no longer installed the surface citing multiple health concerns. other cities say it's cheaper
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and more durable and provides more outdoor space for kids to play. he wants his girls to play soccer, but worries about the exposure to crum rubber. >> our oldest started playing soccer and i wouldn't want her to be a goalkeeper. >> you can see more of the exclusive reporting on nightly news. meanwhile, more proof of the power of social media. lego is scrapping a deal to let shell oil handout lego sets in gas stations. this after a you tube video and viral campaign started by green peace. the video shows lego bricks covered in oil has been viewed nearly six million times on you tube.
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narrator: these are the skater kid: whoa narrator: that got torture tested by teenagers and cried out for help. from the surprised designers. who came to the rescue with a brilliant fix male designer: i love it narrator: which created thousands of new customers for the tennis shoes that got torture tested by teenagers. the internet of everything is changing manufacturing. is your network ready? we have breaking news. downing street announced that the uk will start screening incoming passengers at airports
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in great britain for any signs of ebola. meanwhile, which political story will make headlines in the next 24 hours? pete williams joins me now. a special appearance. we are talking about gay marriage and the legal activities. sort it out for us. >> the supreme court declining to take the appeals from five states. marriage becomes legal in those states. add nevada the subject of the ninth circuit ruling and now we are up to 25 states where marriage is legal, but the action now is in the other states that are in the affected medical circuits from the supreme court declining to take decisions. presumably the law would apply in nose states as well and the states are reacting in different ways. in the tenth circuit, colorado and kansas started a handout. to the north, wyoming said over our dead body. we will wait for a court ruling.
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south carolina and west virginia and we still have to hear about idaho which asked justice anthony kennedy don't make us hand these marriage licenses out. we don't like the procedure and justice kennedy said i will give the parties until thursday until this afternoon to file their papers. no one is quite sure why justice kennedy did that. he maybe wanted to let it play out in the normal time frame. you normally have 21 days after they rule before the order takes legal effect. the ninth circuit said here is our ruling and it goes into effect. maybe that's what plugged justice kennedy. >> clarify about south carolina. i thought we heard they were granting licenses? >> a judge said he was going to grant licenses. there is a 24-hour waiting president because marriage can be dangerous. today the south caroline supreme court said let's hold the phone.
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no licenses gets issued until the federal judge ordered the parties to on what they do next week. it would seem that that judge's hands are tied and the law is that a state cannot ban same-sex marriage. >> it must be confusing to the couples. you can get married and by next week the judge will rescind that order. the o poeb ponents of same-sex marriage would say it ain't over. let us play out. the supreme court may take a case. that's true. i suspect all this confusion will sort out. >> thank you so much. pete williams. >> you bet. >> that are does it for us on "andrea mitchell reports." assistant admip straighter nancy lind boring back from liberia.
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the polls are beginning to tighten and we will be watching where in the world is north korean dictator kim jung unwho hasn't been seen in months. tomorrow is a big day there. if he doesn't show up, there is a lot of talk of a coop. follow online and facebook and twitter. ronan farrow daily is up next. . and for many, it's a struggle to keep your a1c down. so imagine, what if there was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar? imagine, loving your numbers. introducing once-daily invokana®. it's the first of a new kind of prescription medicine that's used along with diet and exercise to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. invokana® is a once-daily pill that works around the clock to help lower a1c. here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed back into the body. invokana® reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in, and sends some sugar out through the process of urination.
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and while it's not for weight loss, it may help you lose some weight. invokana® can cause important side effects, including dehydration, which may cause some people to have loss of body water and salt. this may also cause you to feel dizzy, faint, lightheaded, or weak especially when you stand up. other side effects may include kidney problems, genital yeast infections, urinary tract infections, changes in urination, high potassium in the blood, or increases in cholesterol. do not take invokana® if you have severe kidney problems or are on dialysis or if allergic to invokana® or its ingredients. symptoms of allergic reaction may include rash, swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you experience any of these symptoms, stop taking invokana® and call your doctor right away or go to the nearest hospital. tell your doctor about any medical conditions, medications you are taking, and if you have kidney or liver problems.
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using invokana® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase risk of low blood sugar. it's time. lower your blood sugar with invokana®. imagine loving your numbers. ask your doctor about invokana®. and she gave me advice. she said, "dad, go pro with crest pro-health." [ male announcer ] go pro with crest pro-health. immediately, i felt a difference.
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as a sheriff's deputy who went in his home remains hospitalized with possible ebola symptoms. not a confirmed case, just bringing you that fact. sergeant michael moning has been hospitalized out of an abundance of caution after falling ill. >> it's our understanding that the person was in the apartment and had contact with family members, but that's all we know. this is not one of the 48 persons that is under public health surveillance for the dallas patient. >> the world bank is warning that could deliver a $33 billion economic blow in africa. speaking with world leaders, the head of the cdc likened it to the aids epidemic. >> i will say that in the 30 years i have been working in public health the only thing like this has been aids. we have to work so this is not
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