tv Weekends With Alex Witt MSNBC October 18, 2014 4:00am-5:01am PDT
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maddowblog.com for instructions about how to apply to play. it could be you with a giant head in the skype field. direct hit. hurricane gonzalo sweeps over bermuda and left the island in the dark overnight and there is fears of what the light of day will bring. on the ebola front, new conditions on the dallas nurse, but why no word yet on how the second victim is doing and how they are being treated. good news and bad news, and wall street survived a roller coaster week, one aspect of the economy is saving people money. a fight over footwear. why is one of the most iconic shoe makers suing over two dozen rivals?
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good morning, everyone. we have new developments in the ebola crisis this morning. the condition of the first nurse to test positive has changed from good to fair after being transferred to the national of institutes center. and the second nurse, vincent, may have been at a more advanced statement of the illness than just thought when she travelled on frontier flights between dallas and cleveland, but an e-mail to an employee says crew members on the flight were at a low risk exposure, and the doctors that treated all three ebola patients in dallas is talking about how the two nurses caught the virus from duncan. he says, i think these two nurses took care of a critically ill patient at a time when he was not in control of his bodily fluids, and at a time when the recommendations from the cdc that we were following did not
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include the full respiratory mask. i don't know that, but that's what one person thinks, and that's me. joining me now is sarah outside the hospital in dallas. what do we know, first of all b. how both of the nurses are doing? >> reporter: alex, as you know, both nurses have been transported to specialty isolation units in other states, and vincent taken to emery university hospital in atlanta where they are barred from giving out information about her case because of patient confidentiality laws, and nina pham, we know a lot more about her condition. she had the emotional sendoff on thursday with the video of her doctors in full protective gear telling her good-bye and that they loved her, and she says she loves them in response and tears up, and an emotional sendoff as employees line the road where the ambulance drove her down with signs of support. she is reportedly in fair
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condition. she is downgraded from good to fair, but we are told she is still sitting up and eating a little bit and engaging with the staff there. doctors say this is all part of the natural progression of ebola, and there will be up and down days, and they do say they fully intend to see her walk out of that hospital. >> certainly we hope that is the case indeed. what about the cruise ship, sarah. there was a lab worker in self co quarantine. i guess the workers are trying to disinfect that ship. that's got to be really hard to do. >> reporter: it's a huge job, alex. the cdc manual on how to sanitize a ship is more than 200 pages long, and this is disinfecting the carpets and life switches and air shafts, and it's a huge job.
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passengers on the ship report seeing crew members going around and sanitizing things, railings, the bar, the elevator, and this passenger, like you said, is in a quarantine with her partner inside her room and she is not showing any symptoms. she is nearing the end of the 21-day window and not showing any symptoms, and as the cdc said, it's not possible for anybody not showing active symptoms of ebola to infect anybody else. >> okay, thank you for that. joining me now in the studio, a raouheumatologist, natalie. one nurse's condition has gone from good to fair. what does that tell you? >> good to fair, we never like to have a drop in status like that. we go from stable to critical and etc. again, not knowing all the details of her care, you know, we always know that patients that get sick with this seem to do okay for three to
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four days and then it kind of hits at day six, seven and eight, when the body's immune response starts to fail and the virus takes over and we note that that can happen. it just might be that this is a bump in the road for her, and that either with electrolyte imbalances, orch kidney issues, this could happen. she is going to get plasma from dr. kent bradley, and experimental medications, and thankfully she is being taken care of in the most appropriate place possible, and her chances of survival still remain very good. i think that this is not an unexpected or not anticipated event for her. >> so again, this is part of the normal progression at this point. >> it could very well be, yes. >> this is still fair when you
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talk about ebola, fair is not critical? >> right. and what is important for the viewers to remember, we have had one death in this country from a patient with ebola, and the three people who have been infected on u.s. soil are surviving this disease, and that sends a very important message to the american public that while it was a shame, and even the cdc conceded they mishandled the texas case by not having medical personnel on the ground immediately after the first infection which led to the transmission, and it shows us we can effectively treat the cases in this country. we have shown that. >> you mentioned dr. bradley, and he survived it, and how much can he give and when do they decide to bring his plasma into the situation? >> they have to make sure he is a match and it ago. it's not a blood transfusion, and he is not giving tons of blood. you don't need that much plasma
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to get the ap anti-bodies out. survivors could offer their plasma to newly infected people if they are a match. it's a wonderful resource. >> the dallas workers, if they get past the 21-day period relative to mr. duncan, do you think things will calm down considerably? >> i think things will calm down amazingly, considerably, and the numbers compared to the numbers in liberia, a manageable number for contract tracing, and we learned a lot in the last month about holes in our preparedness, and we have reacted to those and we are hoping not to lose any american lives in this process. >> i just want to reiterate what we heard from gary weinstein, a doctor that treated all the patients at the texas hospital.
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they believe duncan had a lot of bodily fluids and that's how they got infected, and this is one person saying this, and that is me. >> we know the mode of transmission and we know the nurses were not properly suited up, gowned and protected, and that's when the infection occurred. this is not outside of the box. and, again, we are learning lessons from this and we hope not to repeat that. >> we appreciate your insights. see you soon. >> thank you. the big story developing overnight, bermuda in the dark this morning after a category 2 hurricane slammed into it overnight leaving a path of destruction and knocking out power to the island. our meteorologist is joining me now with more on this. still in the dark there, huh? >> yes, that is the case. gonzalo was a destructive storm, so it certainly was -- that was the case, that was anticipated as we have been forecasting the
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system for the last several days, and it made landfall right over bermuda at 8:30 p.m. eastern time friday night, and that's 9:30 p.m. bermuda time and it made landfall has a category 2 hurricane, and most of the damage was due to the strong gusty winds and, of course, the storm surge. not a whole lot of rain fell on the island which was forecasted, again, most of the damage was due to the strong gusty winds through the saturday morning, and the good news is, as gonzalo continues to push away, the rain ended and the winds are subsiding in terms of the storm surge and water levels will subside as well. take a look at gonzalo now, and it's continuing to push off to the north-northeast at 16 to 22 miles per hour, and gonzalo is less than 200 miles north of pw
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burma tkau. hurricane ana, we don't think it's going to have direct impact on the big island as we head into this saturday and sunday, there will be heavy rains and gusty winds. the main track of the storm will stay away from the big island, so that's the good news, alex. again, bermuda is certainly cleaning up on the saturday in terms of ana, and the main track of the storm will stay south of the hawaiian islands. other news, wilson, the police officer that shot and killed brown in ferguson, missouri, said he feared for his life during that minute-long scuffle. the newspaper says wilson said brown pinned him and was reaching for his gun before he shot him. that did not explain why wilson continued to fire at brown when they emerged from the vehicle.
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from there to florida, where dunn was sentenced to life in prison without parole on friday for the shooting death of 17-year-old jordon davis. it happened in late 2012 when dunn got into an argument with a car full of unarmed teenagers over loud music. >> i want the davis family to know that i truly regret what happened. i am sorry that i lost, and if i could do things different i would. >> and he shot into the car, and he claims self defense to all charges. in mexico, police say they have arrested the king pen of a drug cartel in the disappearance of more than 40 college students. officials say there were kidnappings of 43 students, and they may have been killed and dump into the a mass grave that was discovered shortly after the
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incident. just ahead, as we continue to monitor the ebola crisis, we will ask how about how to treat the virus and whether we can expect more cases here in the u.s. all around the world the dedicated people of united airlines ♪ are there to support you. ♪ that's got your back friendly. ♪ dad,thank you mom for said this oftprotecting my future.you. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are uniquely thankful for many things, the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. if you're a current or former military member or their family,
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a new report this morning says president obama is seething a day after appointing an ebola czar. and we have a good saturday morning to you, kristin. can you explain why the president is reportedly seething? >> reporter: we know he was really upset and dissatisfied at the way this ebola response has been handled. we are learning there have been a number of mistakes and missteps by the cdc, and we know there were a lot of mistakes
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made at the dallas hospital, so he reportedly told his aides the response was not tight enough. he held the emergency meetings on wednesday and again on thursday with his cabinet officials to try and make sure that the response was more coordinated, that there was a more robust federal response. that is part of the reason why he decided to appoint a so-called ebola czar. a former chief of staff to vice president biden as well as to vice president, al gore, he was getting a lot of pressure to do that, not just from a country concerned with the negative headlines coming out day after day, but also political pressure. democratic sources telling me they were concerned that the administration getting so heavily criticized, that would hurt their chances. and the republicans are saying
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the czar doesn't have any medical background, and the white house is saying they did not want an ebola expert but an implementation expert, and they are trying not only to reassure the public but quell a political storm. >> well, you need to put the politics aside for all of us, but specifically what is he going to do? do we know from where he is going to work? >> well, he is going to be here coordinating the federal effort, and all of the agencies working together to make sure they are on the same page and they have the same information and they are disseminating that information to the hospitals throughout the country so the hospitals can be prepared to deal with the ebola patients and the public has the correct information, and again, the strategy on the part of the white house is not only dealing with the response here in washington, but they are sending a team down to dallas, and of course, i wouldn't be surprised, alex, if we saw ron claim making
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a trip to dallas in the coming weeks. >> thank you for that. joining me right now, the doctor from the university of pennsylvania and former white house special adviser on health policy. good to see you, sir. my first question would be the apartment of the ebola czar, and it was written up in the new york times, doctors say we need a manager and scientists are not that good at managing something. do you think that the fact that he doesn't have medical experience is a deficit at all, or do you think it's a good appointment? >> i know him and i worked with ron for two years when i was at the white house p. he is an incredibly smart and terrifically well organized, and he will bring in the experts and get the advice he needs, and the institute of health down the street has experts on this disease as do other
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institutions, so i am sure he will get the advice that he needs, and i hope he keeps them close in the white house. >> we keep hearing about dr. kent brantley who survived ebola and his plasma is being used for treatment. first of all, how much can he provide, a single person treating this virus, and beyond that what is the treatment for someone? >> well, the main treatment for people is supportive care, and that is the two big problems with the ebola clinically are that you drop your blood pressure like you have what is called septic shock when the immune system reacts to an infection, whether bacteria or a virus and it releases things, and they decrease the pressure and open up the vessels and that could be extremely dangerous and people die of that, and the second problem is the clotting problems, because the liver
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doesn function, and clotting happens. the on set of symptoms are 12 to 14 days before the people turn around and those problems are sort offoffio oviated. they need to make sure they have enough fluids and the plate let's are available. and some of the doctor's anti-bodies, he has those against the surface protein and that should neutralize it, and you can pull that off without taking all of his blood, and that's what they are doing, whether it's tkpodoing, and whe it's going to be effective or not, that's the problem on not doing a trial on this stuff, and
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we won't know if the patient survived if it was these kind of anti-bodies or not. >> nobody else further comes up with the ebola virus, does that greatly reduce the problems that we're having here in this country at this point? i know you have to look at all the screening at the airports and any number of different factors as well, but past that period, do things calm down a little bit or not? >> you can take a sigh of relief. actually, i think most of it is probably in the first 14 days. but we can, then, take a sigh of relief. but the whole point of appointing the czar is who knows when you might have somebody show up from west africa or someone else that has ebola, and, you know, we have a whole
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series of events like we did in dallas. we should not take that and let our guard down. in fact, the 21 days happens and we still need to be sure hospitals have educated their staff and have gone through training, and they are really ready. i think we have to push forward also on two other fronts, and one is to really get enough vaccine and other experimental agents to actually test them and see if they work or don't work, and we do need to make sure that the situation is under control, because after all if we get that under control and the get ebola epidemic there, it's better for the whole world. we have to make sure that while we are trying to get things under control in the united states, and trying to reassure the public in the united states, we don't for get the epicenter. nigeria was able to control
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their outbreak with the right infrastructure, so we know it's possible and what we need to do is concentrate the resources, health care workers, the protective gear in those areas. >> i am curious, can you put a timeline on where this potentially ends for the u.s.? >> you can't put a timeline on it precisely because we don't know whether anybody else is going to come down with it. it looks increasingly unlikely, but over the next few weeks with hopefully the nurses recovering, we will be out of the danger zone. we won't see another case, and then as i said, we can probably take a breath of calm, but we shouldn't let our guard down. i think having somebody at the top who can make sure that all the hospitals in the country really do get the right information, do educate and train their staff is going to be still important even if we don't have another recurring case.
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one of the things i would like to emphasize, we should take this opportunity to really double down on all of our infection control measures, what happened in dallas doesn't reassure you that all the other infection control measures for everyday patients are at top notch, and that's also important as we have millions of people per year who go into hospitals and get care. >> absolutely valuable lessons learned for sure. thank you so much for your time. appreciate it. >> no problem. will concerns about ebola affect your travel plans. my handle is @alexwitt. during the summer it used to cost me $35 to fill up, and now it costs me 15 bucks. >> that's a big difference. >> very big difference. i make a lot of purchases for my business.
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is isis taking to the sky? a new report says that defected iraqi military officers are training isis militants to fly three russian jets seized from a military base. the planes have been spotted flying below radar near the air base that isis captured last january. the propaganda video from 2013 claims to show aligned militants fighting for the air base and seizing these training jets. joining me now to talk about it, retired colonel jack jacobs. >> the government won't confirm this and don't have information other than that which has been released from isis and its propaganda machine. there's some indication it's unlikely they have captured
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fully working aircraft and if they do, they don't have the repair parts or the technology to repair them and they need constant attention, so it's probably not as big of a threat as isis is trying to make out. >> that's the mechanical part. what about the training when they talk about the iraqi soldiers, sympathetic or members of isis now? >> that's a different story altogether. the video shows looks like they are training aircraft, and they can put bombs and rockets on them and attack ground targets. this is the threat, and it's the biggest threat, and the biggest threat is against the current. we have eyes in the sky, and we have the ability to keep our eye on these things if they get up and start attacking people. >> so clearly, isis would like to get their hands on something that is functional and operation to get to the skies. >> yeah f. things get worse for the syrians, they are lable to
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get ahold of those. the possibility is a real threat. sort term and tactical operations using air by isis could be devastating to people on the ground. >> what about up in the air? we have fighter jets up in the air and doing missions. >> if they are mig 21s and 23s, and we have f-18s, and 22s, and they can shoot down radar, and we can launch air-to-air missiles, and we could take them down quickly. >> when is the last time fighter pilots were engaged in the air in the air wars? >> iraq, it has been sometime ago, but we are pretty good at what we do. the real problem with isis, of course, they will achieve gains on the ground, and they have done that, they just recently
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were run out of kobone. they are going to be able to hold the terrain they seized, and if isis gets planes it could be hard. they are not going to last very long without repair parts, and the technology to keep them flying, it's extremely difficult to do that, especially with aircraft this old. they need lots and lots of repair parts. they have to be changed continuously, and isis doesn't have -- they don't have -- they have the operational capability, perhaps, but not the maintenance. >> good, and thank you very much. they say imtaytion is the serious form of flattery. congress is having none of that. why the classic schumaker is suing more than 30 of its
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it's now 34 past the hour. the supreme court is allowing texas to implement its new voter id law. the high court earlier today rejected an emergency request by the justice department and civil rights groups to halt the measure before early voting begins on monday. that requires voters to provide id. and then more than 200 have been rescued from an avalanche. and then towing a russian container ship carrying tons of oil. the ship could run aground and spill oil is the fear. and then an accident at a concert. the man that help organized the death jumped to his death at a high-rise. a ventilation great they were
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standing on collapsed. one of the music industries biggest stars revealed a secret. bono told a british talk show that he always wears sunglasses because he has had glaucoma for 20 years, and those glasses help his eyes with bright lights. and releasing new guidelines on how health workers should protect themselves against ebola. chris, good morning and welcome. what you have learned about the new guidelines? >> reporter: these new guidelines come in direct to the response to the two texas presbyterian hospital workers that contracted ebola after caring for the first patient, duncan, that passed away from the disease, and criticism from hospital administrators and nurses from texas presbyterian that said there were shifting guidelines from the cdc. here are some of them. one, all caregivers cover their
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skin, and one nurse said her neck was exposed, and they should use alcohol based hand sanitizer on their gloves when they emerge from the room, and there should be a dedicated dressing room outside of the patient's room so they can properly suit up and also when they come out, there is a way to quarantine the personal protective equipment they wear, and also, finally, hospitals use a buddy system, everybody who enters an ebola patient's room, has another partner that witnesses them put on their gear and take it off in the certain order of steps they are supposed to do it, it's a check to make sure that everybody follows the proper protocols. >> can i ask you about amber vincent, and we are not hearing much about her. she is being treated in atlanta.
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why have we not heard any condition reports? >> medical reports are a very sensitive thing, and it's up to the family on how much information is shared. so the family of vincent has chosen to remain private at this time. i just spoke with a spokesperson here at the hospital who did confirm the family doesn't want any information released about vincent. you may remember a couple days ago her family issued a written statement where they thanked everybody for prayers and support but said they request privacy at this time, and that's why we are not hearing anything about vincent at this point. >> thank you for the update. the other big story this morning, bermuda is recovering from the pounding of hurricane gonzalo, and that storm knocked out most of the electricity with winds higher than 100 miles per hour. and let's go to dylan dreyer. it was prettier than yesterday.
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at least the sun is out. >> reporter: yes, the sun returned and the waves roughed up, but last night was brutal. the eyewall came through just before 8:00, and right around 8:00, the eye passed over the island. everything went calm. there was not the slightest breeze and then the backside of the storm raged through the area. we are looking at wind gusts, we have had reports of 144 miles per hour. it was the first time during the storm i was getting nervous, and i was trying to get sleep and then it was no, i will go into the bathroom, and i felt maybe i was be abg baby through the storm, and i found out a lot of other people were going into the bathtub, and everything held up fine. we were totally safe, but all of that wind did cause a lot of damage. we will assess that damage later on, and so far we have 30,000 people without power, and cell phone communications are shaky at best, but we were talking a lot yesterday about the
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causeway, the only connection this island has to the airport, and during hurricane fabian in 2003, that category 3 hurricane washed out the bridge, and there was a replacement bridge and engineers are out assessing it and they expect to re-open it after they just make sure structurally it's okay. seems to have held up, but we have not seen the damage yet, because we are in an isolated area. once we go out and see, i am assuming a lot of vegetation like what we saw in the tropical storm last sunday here, we will see what happens. the island is built for it and seems to have handled it okay. >> a lot of that, they are experienced in bermuda. they are frequently hit by at least tropical storms in that area, and i know you have reported that so many times. can i ask you about the storm right now and where it is headed? >> reporter: yes, 230 miles to the north and it really started to pick up speed overnight. as you can see, we lost the clouds out here, so the storm is racing away. just want to point out, though,
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the east coast of the united states will feel the affects of the rip currents, the surf is going to get churned up and all week long the dangerous and life-threatening rip currents are going to be a danger, and so keep that in mind this weekend. >> thank you so much. travel safe. thanks. it's something that greatly concerns fed chairman, janet yellen. how much do we need to worry about it? that's next. [coughing] dave, i'm sorry to interrupt... i gotta take a sick day tomorrow. dads don't take sick days, dads take nyquil. the nighttime, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, aching, fever, best sleep with a cold, medicine.
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we just want to help everyone, everywhere, breathe a little easier. introducing cvs health. because health is everything. introducing cvs health. i was out for a bike ride. i didn't think i'd have a heart attack. but i did. i'm mike, and i'm very much alive. now my doctor recommends a bayer aspirin regimen to help prevent another heart attack. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. investors are catching their breath after a wild week on wall street. on wednesday the dow plunged 460 points and on friday it powered back with the blue chips up 263 points. what is behind the volatility? joining us is our msnbc contributor. as always, it's great to see you. what is behind the slide, the factors? should people start getting out of the market? >> there was a massive selloff
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on wednesday and a bit of a meltdown, and then yesterday a meltup. we have a lot of volatility. it can be a bit tricky sometimes to pinpoint what is driving financial markets, especially in volatile times like this, but it does seem that once again markets woke up to general economic weakness around the globe. an important forecasting group, the international monetary fund, marked down their global forecast by almost half a point earlier in the week, and that caught some investor's attention. germany, which has been a powerhouse in europe, one of the few, they have posted unfortunate numbers. if you look at the overall rate of inflation in europe, it's down to .3%, and that's low. when it gets too low it's a sign of weak demand and danger ahead, so i think these factors
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contributed to some of the volatility. >> we have talked so much with you about how people have not benefitted during wall street's rice, so many, i mean, the vast majority, and you wrote about how wages never rose with that. why is this? >> this is really one of the most important factors that is yet to recover in the u.s. economy. i was just telling you about europe, and our economy is doing better on a variety of macro economic indicators, but you are right, alex, a lot of folks that are just drawing paychecks, and i am sure they are glad to hear the gdp is doing well, and if it's not reaching them, that's a big gap. i think the key there, alex, is diminished worker bargaining power. it's connected to the inequality issue that you and i have discussed before. the american worker just has less ability to claim what i think many of us would call
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their fair share of a growing economy. some of it has to do with the lack of unions, and of course that has been around for a long time, and some of it has to do with generalized weakness in the job market, and the fact the unemployment record has been elevated for so long, and it makes it tougher for workers to press for equal pay. >> and there were quote, significant income and wealth games for those at the top and stagnant living standards for the majority. what are the solutions to that? >> i do agree with that, and i am speaking to you from boston, where i am at, the conference at the federal reserve, and janet yellen spoke there yesterday, and it's one of the first times that the chair in the federal reserve, the world's chief economists spoke in such depth
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about the inequality problem, and i give her tremendous kudos for bringing that to the forefront. this is real. you mention college debt. again, that's kind of an intersection between two trends, stagnant family incomes, particularly in the middle and lower end of the scale, and increasing college tuitions. that kind of collision made it tough for families who want their kids to get ahead. and they talked about the challenges of inequality of opportunity, and the education channel is so important there. >> gas prices, at least, a lot of people are smiling because the price is dropping. national wide the gallon of gas is $3.14, and 2.89 $2.89 in new jersey this weekend. wow. >> sorry to be a boring old economist, but let's go back to supply and demand. there has been a significant increase on the supply side when
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it comes to oil. some of that is fracking, and some of that is the fact that the saudis in particular are stepping up their oil production. on the demand side, there is weakness throughout the globe in europe and some of the emerging economies as well, but i think it's more of a supply side factor and that's an increase in the amount of oil on the world market, and while that does contribute to this lower price issue, i talked about deflation earlier, and in this case i think the lower price of oil is generally quite a positive. that -- what do they say? it's a cent off the price of gas at the pump adds a billion -- >> wow. >> the maker of a sneaker had it with all the knockoffs. how converse is trying to save
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they are one of the most classic looks in american fashion, converse chuck taylor all-stars, first popularized on the nba courts of the 1960s then co-opted by the punk rockers in the '70s and now they even show up on the red carpet. chuck taylors might have been a little too popular with the competition, converse filed lawsuits with 32 companies for frayedmark infringements. alex an der kauffman has been following the story. you've got discounters and high fashion, who all is being accused? >> well, you have four chinese companies, which is important for part of the suit. you also have a lot of really big retailers, sketchers, h and m even. >> after we called converse for
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information about the suit, they sent us these three pairs of shoes, one is the original, two are the alleged knockoffs, not a lot of difference here. this one is the legit one, has the converse seal. there's that. this one is pretty close imitation, got the stitching. this one is not expensive at all, k mart shoe, runs like $16 or $17. how difficult is it for a fashion company to make a trademark infringement case like this? >> well, it's very difficult, what this is relying on is that test consumers and prove the fact that consumers associate this design with converse and not just this design with these sneakers in general. and that will really prove to be a difficult test for the converse to prove. >> yeah, look, i'm curious why converse is filing the lawsuits just now.
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we talked about them being iconic in the '60s, they we -- t the timing? >> nike owned them since 2003. and converse claims that since 2008 there's been a great proliferation of these knockoffs. so their sales have been doing pretty well. they make up about 6% of nike's overall revenue, but it's kind of unclear why they are suing now. i mean, one would -- i would venture to guess it's just because they are seeing so many different brands produce their own knockoffs and now they want to crack down. >> i guess you have to define the work knockoff, i would like to have murray pull back up the graphic. price points for all three, k mart, $17, converse at 55, the original one. then you have these fashionista ones, $225 a pair.
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can you give me an assessment how prominent this look is across fashion today? >> it's very common. you have all -- they are suing 31 different companies and many are the biggest retailers in the world. it's a very common shoe now. it's something that a lot of people are wearing and that's what's going to make this even more difficult to prove in court. >> okay. i appreciate that. business editor there, thanks for your time. we want to know, we did reach out to the companies we mentioned here, and ralph lauren and ed hardy, none of them returned our calls and others said they are not going to comment on an ongoing lawsuit. that wraps up this hour. straight ahead, you've got "up with steve kornacki." man: i know the name of eight princesses. i'm on expert on softball. and tea parties. i'll have more awkward conversations than i'm equipped for,
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sooejing about. ♪ all right, good morning, thanks for being with us on another saturday morning, very eventful one overnight. we had new developments in the ferguson case. we had the first public words coming from the officer's camp about what happened and supreme court weighing in on the controversial voter i.d. law in the state of texas. their ruling and what it means in a bit. we'll have the latest from ferguson when -- we'll have the latest from ferguson as soon as we get a reporter on for that. we're working on that as we speak. sorry, there's a lot happening right now. we want to begin with the latest on the ebola crisis, more than 4400 deaths worldwide right now, three confirmed cases in the united states. two cases krrt contracted in the united states and election just 17 days from now that all of this
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