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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  May 9, 2015 3:00am-4:01am PDT

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american express' timeless safety and security are now available on apple pay. the next evolution of membership is here. today marks 70 years since the germans surrendered in world war ii, the nazis surrendering marked the end of the war in europe. but it did not mark the end of worlgd war ii. victory in europe day after germany surrendered was may 8th 1945, but vj day in japan did not come until august of that same year after the u.s. used nuclear bombs to forced them to surrender three years after hitler killed himself. in the closing days of the war, japan managed to inflict the
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only american casualties that happened on the u.s. mainland in all of world war ii. yes, there were millions of americans that went overseas and fought all over the globe. hundreds of thousands of americans killed in world war ii, millions of people killed worldwide, tens of millions of people killed worldwide. in terms of attacks on american targets specifically, there was the devastating attack on the pacific fleet in pearl harbor in 1941 where more than 2,000 americans were killed in the u.s. territory of hawaii. but in terms of the access powers in world war ii killing americans here killing americans inside the continental united states on american soil, it only happened once during all of world war ii. and it happened right at the end of the war. they killed a 13-year-old girl an 11-year-old boy, two
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13-year-old boys a 14-year-old brother and also killed a young american woman who was pregnant when she died. the only american casualties killed on the u.s. mainland were those five little kids and that pregnant woman who were killed on a sunday school outing in oregon in 1945. this is how they did it. this is old footage from the 40s showing what looks like a hot air balloon floating through the skies, but what that is is a powerful bomb it doesn't have any steering or directional mechanism. it floats on air currents. it's made of light paper made out of tree bark.
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it's filled with hydrogen which is how it floats on air. this 33-feet paper balloon filled with hydrogen is carrying an explosive payload. it's a balloon bomb. somewhere between 6,000 and 9,000 balloon bombs like this one were launched by japan during world war ii at the united states and canada. japanese did not have the ability to send squadrons to bomb american cities, but they invented these balloon bomb contraptions to try to be the next best thing. so they would launch these balloons off the pacific coast of japan and their plan was to get them high enough into the air that the jet stream would pick them up and carry them all the way across the pacific ocean to north america. and these balloon bombs would
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come down all up and down the west coast of north america. this is footage from just after the war. >> the balloon came down in canada and the united states. demolition squads were on constant alert. most landed without exploding. the threat persisted until the war's end and only today we learn a secret long. >> the military could not know where the bombs were going to come down once they launched them in japan. it's part of a reason the limit the scare factor. but one of the things the japanese hoped these balloon bombs would do is particularly hoped they would cause forest fires and they did start some
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fires. they came down all over the place. one of them made it east to nebraska. blew up over omaha, nebraska, on april 18th, 1945. this one was found on the ground with the bomb still attached to it in bigalow, kansas. this one is one that was photographed after it got caught up in some wire fencing, somewhere. the exact location of this one has been lost to history, although we do still have this photograph. this is one that landed in an open field in oregon in a town called echo, oregon, up in the northeast corner of that state. that one they recovered in tact and they eventually put it on display. but the bomb that came down in southern oregon, in blye, oregon, and killed those five little kids and that pregnant woman who stumbled upon it in their sunday school outing in 1945, that is the only balloon bomb that is known to have killed anyone. and they marked it with a monument near the spot where it blew up in blye, oregon, in 1950.
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because japan sent so many of these things up in the jet stream in world war ii, it is thought that some of the thousands of them that made it to north america might still be out there in the wilderness. just last year, they found an exploded one that drifted all the way up to british columbia. two forest workers found it half-buried in the dirt, in the middle of the woods, 70 years after it had been launched. they called in the royal canadian mounted police to handle it. the mounties investigated, realized what it was, and promptly decided that he would blow it up with a big charge of c4. that was just last year. people still look for these things all up and down the west coast, from california all the way up into canada. but the one balloon bomb that killed anyone, the one instance of the axis powers killing american citizens, american civilians on the american mainland during world war ii, it happened 70 years ago this week. it happened two days before the german surrenders, two days before ve day.
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today to mark the 70th anniversary of the german surrender, today to mark the 70th anniversary of victory in europe day, more than 50 world war ii era planes flew in 15 different formations, low and loud, over downtown washington, d.c. they flew right down the national mall, right over the washington monument. it was basically a big public air show in what is normally the nation's most restricted air space. these restored planes, these are restored planes. they're not reproductions. they're not copies of world war ii era planes. these are the real deal, from then, restored and maintained and kept air-worthy by civilian owners who commit to spending not small fortunes, actual fortunes, to keep these planes flying, basically, as a very expensive historical labor of love. this huge flyover that all these restored planes did today, this was the first time that civilian-owned aircraft have
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been allowed to fly through the restricted air space over downtown washington, d.c., since 9/11. 9/11 is when they made the whole area of downtown washington, d.c., with the u.s. capitol and the white house and all the rest of it, they made it protected air space. it's only military and law enforcement and official aircraft that are ever allowed in that space since 9/11, except for today. today is the first time they have made an exception for these historic planes. in russia, tomorrow, they're going to hold the largest commemoration that russia has ever held to commemorate the role the soviet union played in defeating the nazis and winning world war ii. this is actually what you're seeing is rehearsal for the big day tomorrow. i think russia can often be a little squeamish about reminding the world that they were very recently the soviet union, but if there is one soviet accomplishment they're very happy to broadcast to themselves as a nation and to the world, if there's one thing they want to unabashedly brag about, it's about beating the nazis when they were still the soviet union. so there will be the biggest commemoration of that ever in
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the former soviet union in moscow, tomorrow. in britain today, in britain today, it was really striking. in britain today, they also held a large national commemoration to recognize this 70-year anniversary of the end of world war ii in europe. but britain also just yesterday had a huge super-divisive, in many ways, shocking national election that resulted among other things in the heads of three major political parties resigning last night. but today, in london, 12 hours after those election results shocked that country, all of that country's political leaders, including the ones who just quit last night, they were all there together, side by side, at this commemoration, exhibiting whatever it is that is the polar opposite of partisan politics. so this week, 70 years ago, it was not the end of the bloodiest war in human history, but it was the beginning of the end of the bloodiest war in human history.
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and this is one of the last times we will have a major commemoration of the ending of that war, at which a good number of the people who fought in that war will still be here to accept the nation's thanks. president obama released his weekly radio address early this week, so it would be ready in him for today's ve day commemorations. he said in his address, he said, quote, this was the generation that literally saved the world, that ended the war, and laid a foundation for peace. >> let's salute once more that generation of americans whose courage and sacrifice are the reason we're here today in peace and freedom. their spirit lives on in our brave men and women in uniform and their families, who continue to defend the very freedoms our parents and grandparents bought for them. >> there's a lot going on in the news today. there is running for president news, there is national security news, there is really freaking fascinating news out of that uk election, and some things that might happen globally because of
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what happened in that one country's election last night, and we're going to get to all of that and more over the course of this next hour for friday night's show. but you know what, one thing we are not going to talk about or report on tonight is the freaking jade helm conspiracy theory on the right. this ongoing and in some ways now worsening conspiracy theory on the political right that the u.s. military is somehow an enemy of the american people, and the u.s. military is conspiring to round up america conservatives around the guise of what they say is a military training exercise, but which is really, well, you know, these military guys, they just can't be trusted. that conspiracy is basically turning into a movement in the american political right right now. and it is not going away. and in some ways, in today's news, it got worse. and we have been covering it over the last few days and we will cover it in days ahead if it continues to get worse. but you know what, not today. today is ve day. today is 70 years since ve day.
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and so today, out of all days, at least for this hour, we will give it a rest. and you can give it a rest. and for now, instead, i will leave you with harry truman and then we will be back with the rest of today's news. >> this is a solemn, but glorious hour. i wish that franklin d. roosevelt had lived to see this day. general eisenhower informs me that the forces of germany have surrendered to the united nations. the flags of freedom fly all over europe. for this victory, we join in offering our thanks to the providence which has guided and sustained us through the dark days of adversity and into life. so, it's time to pick swag items.
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so i'm going to start with a book that you found in your pile of books. >> is this our only copy? >> i think it might be our only copy. >> i think this is -- >> but, look! >> oh, eric cantor was still there. kevin mccarthy is still there. looks different now. paul ryan, yeah, i think -- okay. >> all right. >> we also found, no idea why we have these, the axis of evil finger puppets. >> wow! >> yeah. >> the ayatollah and saddam and kim jong-il and george bush. >> they put george bush on the axis? >> he coined the axis of evil, so it's like -- >> okay, all right. >> i don't know where that came from. and then the third thing is, this was from 2010, we did a bunch of stories about people throwing waffles at hockey players. and some of the people, some of the fans of the vermont canucks -- not vermont,
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vancouver canucks used to wear these green outfits. i believe at one point we had kent jones in this, throwing waffles at you. >> it has a tag on it. >> it's new with tag. >> invisible man. >> yeah. >> this? >> i think. >> don't you think? >> let's make sure it's been,, you know -- yeah. >> smells okay. you can call me shallow... but, i have a wandering eye. i mean, come on. national gives me the control to choose any car in the aisle i want. i could choose you... or i could choose her if i like her more. and i do. oh, the silent treatment.
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so you wanna get out of here? go national. go like a pro. you get used to stale odors in your mudroom. you think it smells fine, but your guests smell this... febreze air effects works instantly to eliminate odors you've gone noseblind to. smells like a field of awesome in here. so you and your guests can breathe happy. in this great land of ours, when we are fully staffed, the number of people who have a job in this country being a state legislature is 7,383. and it turns out, having more
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than 7,300 people in that job category in our country makes for a lot of opportunity for wide and varied criminal experience by public officials. for example, just during this past year, speakers of the house from four different states have been indicted on corruption charges. in new york, not only has the house speaker been indicted, but as of this week, so has the leader of the state senate. and that's on top of the hoff dozen lawmakers who have not just been arrested and indicted in recent years, they have been convicted. so, getting arrested, getting indicted, even getting convicted as a serving state lawmaker, is sort of getting to be a dog bites man story. is that even newsworthy anymore? sometimes, though, a particular criminal indictment rises above the general hubbub of your particular indictments of imprisonments of state lawmakers. for instance, there's senator leland yee of california, who was indicted on charges of not just corruption, but also racketeering and money
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laundering, and also gun trafficking. he's being charged with being an illegal gun runner, while being a state senator. former senator ye did step down from his post and he is fighting the charges. he says he's innocent. in virginia, the lawmaker in question is named joe morrissey. he was accused of having sex with a teenager. he pled guilty. and for a while, even after pleading guilty, he kept his day job in the virginia state house. he would go to his work in the day at the state capital, and then at night, he would return to his home, which was a cot in the local jail. state lawmakers end up in some truly creepy criminal proceedings all over the country, it happens. but tonight, even given that recent history, we have a new nomination for perhaps the creepiest one yet. vermont state legislature. take it away. >> a pretty full courtroom here at the franklin county courthouse, witnessed the senator, by way of his attorney, deny any involvement in what
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police are calling years of sexual assault. >> are you resigning? >> reporter: the republican state senator who represents franklin county and the town of alberg didn't talk to reporters as he walked into court to answer six sex charges. the 63 year old senator, who lives in this home in franklin, allegedly forced his female farm workers to engage in sexual acts, according to investigators. court paperwork says victims were told they could live in this trailer in exchange for sex. in addition, at least one victim told police the senator offered to take her to a farm, where she could have sex with a group of farmhands for more money. >> ick. maybe i'm prejudiced because i live in new england, but when i think of the state that is most likely to raise the bar for horrifying indictment of sitting state lawmaker, i don't think of vermont. i don't. not the first place that pops into mind, but now you have it. in technical terms, state senator norm mcalister faces
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three counts of felony sexual assaults and three counts of prohibited acts, in terms of the particulars, you can almost feel the vermont press today trying to sort through how much was too much to print about these allegations. there's the allegation about how frequently he approached the women for services. there's the allegation that he suggested a woman sell services to other men besides himself, because it would provide, quote, a good, steady means of income for both of us. the vermont state police initially said last night that senator mcallister would be charged with human trafficking in addition to the sex assault charges, but today in court, the prosecutor did not end up charging him with human trafficking. an affidavit in the case includes the transcript of a phone call, in which norm mcallister allegedly apologizes to one of the women who says she is his victim. this woman reportedly came to local police, told them what she said this senator had been subjecting her to, she then agreed, reportedly, to have her conversations with the senator recorded by the police, as she called him from the vermont
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state police barracks. police confronted senator norm mcallister at the vermont state capital during a break in the senate debates yesterday. they arrested him at the stale capitol. at one point, two other republican state senators briefly stepped in during the arrest to act as his lawyer, while the police questioned him. but then today in court, the senator entered a plea with a different lawyer. he entered a plea, not guilty, on all counts. three of the charges against him carry a possible sentence of life in prison. he's out on bail now, on $20,000 bail. we reached out to senator mcallister this evening for comment. if we hear back, we will let you know. but tonight, it remains an open question whether this state senator will resign or try to stay in office while fighting these charges. and nationwide, a new bar has perhaps been reached for what you can stay in office while facing in a court of law.
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joining us now is mike donohue, senior staff writer for the burlington free press, who is the reporter who broke this story last night. mr. donohue, thank you very much for being here. it's a pleasure to have you here. >> thank you very much. good to be with you. >> as far as i understand it, there is nothing in the vermont state constitution or in the senate rules which say you have to resign, or you have to do anything in particular, if you are arrested and indicted, even on very serious charges. is it still an open question as to whether senator mcallister will still be a senator? >> well, he -- his term, it's a two-year term, and he is -- this is the end of his first year coming up, so he still has another year that he can serve, but, you're right, there is nothing in state law or the constitution or whatever that makes him forced to step down. >> so he could, theoretically, continue doing the work of a senator now that he's out on bail, while facing these
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charges. you broke this story. your longtype reporter in vermont and everybody i know in vermont tells me you have great sources, you're the unimpeachable reporter of your beat. when did you first learn about these allegations? did you have a heads up that this was coming? >> i was fortunate enough to hear it earlier this week. obviously, because of the sensitive nature of the charges and who he is, i wanted to make sure that, you know, it was legitimate, and that wasn't political in nature. and, wednesday, i was making some phone calls, a lot of people dodging me, but eventually, there was some basis to believe that he was about to be arrested. >> it appears from what we've seen in terms of the court documents that authorities moved quickly. that some of this investigation seems to have started as recently as monday. obviously, the arrest made yesterday at the state capital.
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is that your understanding that they moved very quickly on this? >> i think they were very concerned about what the allegations are. i've also been told that the "burlington free press" had learned about it and may have forced them to move a little quicker than they had planned to initially. >> i understand. in the complaint as it's laid out, there are three women who appear to be his reportedvilles or alleged victims for the crimes for which he's now charged. do the prosecutors and police believe that they understand the magnitude here, or do they believe that there may be other victims that they haven't yet found? >> i think it's still undecided as to whether there could be more victims out there. the charges against him, some of them go back as much as like 2 1/2 years. senator mcallister owns a big dairy farm in northwestern vermont. unclear as to how many people he employed or how many people he knew on other farms.
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and it's still coming together, as you said, rachel. it all broke initially a complaint on monday that was fielded by the vermont state police. >> mike donohue, senior staff writer for the "burlington free press" breaking this story. thanks for helping us to understand this very disturbing and as of yet unresolved case. thanks for having you here tonight. >> anytime, thank you. all right. i got to say, we probably more than other national news shows focus on state politics. i have a resistance to focusing on any individual weird behavior, bad behavior, alleged criminal behavior about any one state representative, because we do have more than 7,000 of them in this country, but every once in a while, you start to realize that there's either a pattern or an individual allegation that is a freaking national news story, even if it has emerged from this pool of state legislators, that are always doing really creepy stuff if you look at them as a group across the country. congratulations, vermont, you're now top of the list. we have more ahead,
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i have something to show you next. cnbc's john harwood tonight just posted a new interview with presidential candidate ben carson. in that interview, i think ben carson sprained something in john harwood. we've just got the tape of this interview. it hasn't been out there at all tonight. it's next. it's astonishing.
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right now, verizon is offering unlimited talk. and text. plus 10 gigs of shareable data. yeah, 10 gigantic gigs. for $80 a month. and $15 per line. more data than ever. for more of what you want. on the network that's #1 in speed. call. data. and reliability. so you never have to settle. $80 a month. for 10 gigs. and $15 per line. stop by or visit us online. and save without settling. only on verizon. at the beginning of this week, on monday, we got the latest entrance into the jam-packed presidential republican field. on monday, the first one of the week, in the great city of detroit, retired neurosurgeon, conservative-based super star, drft ben carson, jumped into the race. he held a big political rally, complete with an excellent gospel choir. and ben carson is rolling out his presidential campaign, one
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of the things that you do in your big rollout week, if you can, you try to do as many interviews as you can with t national media, to try to build national buzz around your candidacy. so ben carson sat down with john harwood from cnbc. we've got the tape of that interview. and there was a moment during that interview that will now become legend. just watch this. this is from john harwood's ben carson presidential interview. >> there's one passage in your book, where you were talking about gay marriage, and you said, i believe in the traditional definition of marriage and that no group has the right to change that. how do you walk into this arena and manage that? >> recognize that if you change the definition of marriage for one group, what do you say to the next group. >> what is the next group? >> do you say -- well, we changed it for this group. but that's it. we're not changing it for anybody else. does that seem fair?
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>> well, but what other groups are there? >> there are more groups, i guarantee it. >> like -- >> i think you know that there are more groups. everybody knows there are more groups. >> honest to god, i don't know what you're talking about. what do you -- >> other variations on traditional marriage. you don't think there are any others? >> you mean like bigamy or something? >> that's a possibility. that's a possibility. why would you stop? with one group being able to change it and then say to the next group, you can't change it. >> oh, i think you know what i'm talking about. i think you know about the groups. john harwood, honest to god. if this is any indication of what the ben carson candidacy is going to be like, i will admit to being a little excited for what's to come. speaking of which today, we learned about another republican presidential hopeful, who's about to get into the race, republican senator lindsey graham of south carolina, is reportedly about to make it official.
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sources close to lindsey graham say he will announce his presidential run june 1st, probably in south carolina. lindsey graham's announcement will come, if you're counting, roughly 240 days before the first actual nominating contest, which is the iowa caucus. lit come about 500 days before the actual presidential election in november 2016. so, assuming that lindsey graham is the republican nominee for president in 2016, hah! he will spend the next 500 or so days campaigning for that office. this is not normal. i mean, it's become normal, but it shouldn't be normal. it's not globally normal. "the washington post" had a great chart today, showing just how not normal this is, at least compared to our closest allies in the democratic world. compared to, say, how it works in the uk, which just had their big elections yesterday. in the uk this year, they dissolved parliament on march 30th, which is the first step toward having an election. candidates filed to run for office in the several days thereafter, and then the election was held yesterday, on
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may 7th, a grand total of 38 days from the beginning of the election process to the end of the election process, and now it's over, 38 days. here in the u.s., it's more like 600 days. whose process do you think is better? in terms of what happened in those uk elections last night, it was sort of a political shock wave. you don't need 600 days to build up to a suspenseful ending. the big question heading into the british election day was whether or not the conservative party prime minister -- the conservative party of prime minister david cameron could win enough seats to keep him as prime minister, to keep the conservatives in power. the polls heading into the voting showed the liberal party in the uk, the labor party, essentially in a dead heat with the conservatives. but, turns out, polls, schmols, in the end, it was more like a blowout and labor just tanked. the conservatives won their biggest victory in the uk for more than two decades. the labor party, which thought they were going to end up
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gaining seats, ended up losing 26 seats. they were really just lost out. the labor party lost a seat in wales, that they have settled for more than a century. it's a seat they have held since 1906, but they lost it last night. the leader of the labour party, ed miliband, resigned immediately as head of the party as soon as the results came in. it was just a very bad night for them last night. and here's the really interesting thing to keep an eye on that might have implications for the whole world. it has to do specifically with the results in scotland. this is what the representation in the british parliament looked like in terms of the scottish seats, before last night's results. so the seats in the british parliament from scotland. parliament looked like this, in terms of party representation, before last night's results. the red bar there represents the labour party, the yellow bar is for the scottish national party, which led the effort for scotland to secede and become its own country last year, even though it wasn't successful. but this is how it looked heading into last night. here's how it looks now. keep an eye on the red and yellow bars.
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boing! yeah, the scottish national party just cleared the house last night. they swept almost every single seat that scotland holds in the uk parliament. and that could have very practical consequences for this. this is the delivery system for the uk's nuclear arsenal. this is one of britain's advanced submarines that can be used to launch a nuclear warhead. the british nuclear arsenal is completely submarine-based, and those submarines are all housed off the coast of scotland. and the newly elected scottish national party campaigned on their complete opposition to the nuclear weapons program in the uk, which just so happens to be based in their backyard in scotland, where they completely control all the parliamentary seats. so, what's going to happen to british nuclear weapons now? don't know. but last night's election sort of changes everything, with regard to the politics of that. and it took them only 38 days from start to finish to do it. it's inspirational. watch this space. but for people with copd
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this is a public service announcement. call your mom. or, call somebody who's been like a mom to you. or at least call somebody who is a great mom and tell them that you think so. it's important. >> my mom grew up in really, really poor northeastern canada in newfoundland. they closed the fisheries and nobody had any work. and so my mom felt like she had three work options. really, only three. she could be a nun. she could be a nurse. or she could be a teacher. she didn't want to be a nun, for a lot of reasons. squeamish around blood and not interested in the human body. and tried teaching and didn't like it. so she fled the country. left in the dead of night without telling anybody and emigrated to the united states, where one of her other sisters had also fled. they were these two hot blond girls from canada with no money and no connections, what were they going to do? so they both got secretary jobs. i find pride in what my mom did
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in her gumption. like, given the range of opportunities she had, she's like, i choose not to take any of those three options and instead to make new options for myself. that sense of self-worth that it took for her to do that rather than passively accepting what was offered to her is totally inspirational to me. had she had the opportunities that i had, she'd be secretary something, not somebody's secretary, right? you know? >> happy mother's day. call your mom. public service announcement now over. we'll be right back. just because i'm away from my desk
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so if you want to drive your car up to the white house, the first thing you should know is, no, no, you cannot do that. you can't do that you're not allowed -- not unless you, in this instance, are president obama, in which case, hello, mr. president, i always hope that you watch sometimes. but if you are not president obama, or the secret service, or somebody else with official permission to do so, you really just can't drive up to the white house. if you try to drive up to the white house, this is what you will see. after the oklahoma city bombing, they closed off one of the streets where you used to be able to drive really close to the white house, and so there's now that one block between the white house and lafayette park that's basically a big pedestrian mall, because no cars are allowed there anymore. that change was made after oklahoma city in 1995. but then after 9/11 attacks, in 2001, they decided to close off other streets and entrances as well, to keep cars and
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unscreened people even further away from the white house. but when they made those changes after 9/11, admittedly, they did it in sort of a hodgepodge way. they put up what were supposed to be these temporary concrete barriers. but 14 years later, those temporary barriers are still there. basically, parts of the white house perimeter look like a poorly run construction sites, with stacks of jersey barriers and a random mishmash of ballards and planters that mostly don't have plants in them and temporary metal fencing and occasionally an unsturdy temporary-looking little guard shack. that's what it's looked like for years. but now they're going to tidy it up. they have just announced a number of temporary security enhancements at the white house complex as well as aesthetic improvements. some of the aesthetic improvements will be removing some of those ugly concrete barriers at six of the vehicle checkpoints around the white house. they'll replace the concrete
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walls and ballards and all the rest with steel plate barriers, like these ones. they're barriers that can be raised and lowered mechanically. much fancier than all the concrete junk and much more intimidating. but they've announced that change now. they're going to move to this type of security instead. and that construction on those metal planks and stuffs that's all due to start really soon, is going to be done by the middle of the summer, apparently. and that is really going to change what it looks like, and in a way, what it feels like around the white house in washington. and speaking of what it feels like around the white house in washington, last night, we used this rather excellent foam core full-scale mock-up of the white house fence, to show you the change they are about to make to the big iron white house fence. after the recent spree of people jumping the white house fence, the plan is now to install a whole new, bigger, badder fence
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around the white house, as of next year. but to get us to next year, in the meantime, they are also planning to augment the existing fence, which looks like this, but not made of foam core, and the way they are augments it, we showed you this last night, they're going to be clamping something that looks a little bit like this right at the top. these extra spikes will bolt on to the top of the extra fence and put these extra spiky bits in between the decorative spear points that are already there. and the new spear points, the new spikes will be sort of angled out a little bit. and honestly, while it is, i will admit, very exciting to have a scale mock-up of the white house fence, and what the change is going to be to the white house fence, even doing this last night, i still don't really get it functionally. it doesn't seem to me that this will be any harder to get over than this. and so, back to the drawing board. or rather, back to the welding torch! so, today we contracted with a nice guy named hans at exclusive
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iron works in new york and we asked him to make it for us, for real. so, look at what we've got now! this is very exciting. this is iron, and this shows what it's like now. this shows what the white house fence like is now, basically. and this shows what it is going to be like when they bolt on the new spiky bits starting in the middle of the summer. this is what it's going to look like. now i get it, right? i mean, this seems more awkward to get ahold of than this. because you've got a smaller handhold to get your hand in there. it also seems more ak ward to get yourself over skpand if you do, it seems way more pokey than it used to. if you think about it, if you're going over this fence, the spear points are pokey, but they only poke you once you are going over
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the fence. then when you fall, you might fall over. by being angled out will poke you before you are actually going over the fence. therefore, they might stop you from doing so. thank you, hans for making this for us. and hopefully some day somebody soon will really want to win this. because we have nowhere to put it in the office. when it comes to good nutrition...i'm no expert. that would be my daughter
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behold. a screeching tire. a mysterious thump. friday night news dump time. pretty soon, julia who is playing -- >> katrina. she's an attorney who is married to an attorney. she performs in community theater and she has two french bulldogs with names that are fun to yell.
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>> katrina, hello, welcome. thank you for being here. >> very nice to meet you. >> i'd wick like to know about the bulldogs please. >> they're adorable. they're here with me. i can show you them. i'm kind of obsessed with dogs. that's stella. >> stella. stella! >> yep. and our other one is khan. as in, wrath of. >> that is awesome. i always wanted to name a dog fire for that exact reason. well done. >> don't go in any crowded theaters. >> luckily, that's not going to happen. that's just not going to happen. mostly because i don't go to the theater. let's talk about how this game works. e e you here. thank you for playing. we'll spell it out. you're going to get three multiple choice questions. they're all about this week's news. if you get at least two right, you will win a cheap thing we're a little bit embarrassed about. >> this very fancy mini cocktail shaker. >> french bull dog size.
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>> i'm excited. >> good, all right. if you get them all right and you need extra credit or if you don't get them all right and you need a consalesian prize, we have something that has been cluttering up the office. tonight's random office swag is more random than usual. >> it's this green man suit. that we had in the closet. >> i want that so much. >> do you? >> to be clear. >> i have no idea what i'll do with it. >> the dogs can help. i have to tell you, you don't get the man. you don't get the mannequin. you just get the suit. >> yeah. i wouldn't have enough room for the whole man inside. i think i would just put that on my wall or something. i don't know. >> that's what you're playing for. we'll also bring in the voice of maddow block, who will determine whether or not you got right answers. good evening, steve. >> hi. >> ready for the first question? >> i am. >> from monday's show. >> okay.
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>> we reported that a very unusual law was passing through the state legislature in oregon. it would soon head to the governor's desk. republicans in the legislature voted against it. democrats had the votes to pass it, though, so this is a question. what unusual new bill is about to be signed into law by oregon governor kate brown? is it, a, a bill making attack owls the state bird of oregon. b, a bill giving landmark status to the old carpeting at the portland airport. c, a bill to automatically register all oregon residents to vote. or d, a bill to require a background check for all gun sales in the state of oregon? >> it's d, gun background checks. >> steve, did she get that right? >> she did. the correct answer is d, background checks, and i can update, governor brown told president obama just today she will sign this bill into law early next week. >> tah-dah. >> all right.
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>> so you got one right, katrina. well done. the president's conversation with the governor about it seemed like it was a little weird. he got off the tarmac in oregon. they talked about the weather. he said where he would like to go hiking in oregon, and then he asked about the gun bill. it was right at the top of this mind. obviously, he was reading your mind. second question. ready? >> yes. >> this is from wednesday's show. we reported a shocking election result this week in which a really conservative place, a place that had been governored by the conservative party for 40 years in a row voted to throw the conservatives out and elect a new liberal government. where did that happen this week? a, kazakhstan, b, alberta, canada. c, scotland, or d, scarborough country. >> alberta canada. >> steve, what's the right answer? >> let's check the segment from wednesday's show. >> friends, i believe the change
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has finally come to alberta. >> yes, the correct answer is b, alberta canada, and our contestant is 2 for 2. >> you're playing for glory and the green thing. are you ready for the last question? >> yes, i am. >> last night's show, if you were listening carefully, you might have heard me get a shout out to somebody named limber butt mccubbens. who is that? a, somebody who was arrested for erecting an edward snowden statue in a brooklyn park. b, one of the two new england staffers named in the deflategate report. c, a failed white house fence jumper or d, a candidate for united states presidential candidate. >> presidential candidate. >> you have the answer for us? >> this is not a list of cranks and protest candidates and
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people who change their name to something embarrassing so they can see for office and see their funny name on the ballot. i'm looking at you, limber butt mccubbens. >> that's in fact an official candidate, and katrina is right again. >> do we know that was a name change, though? >> it -- you know, it's true. the mccubbens family is very angry with me. they named all their kids things that start with "l." will you do the math? did katrina do well? >> she totally wins the green man suit and the cocktail shaker. >> if you don't want the green man suit, i would understand. just refuse delivery, but we're going to put it in the mail. >> my husband just said we want it. he's in the next room. >> so it turns out we want it. katrina, it was really, really nice to meet you and your husband by proxy and stella and khan. thank you so much for playing. >> this was so much fun. thank you. >> well done. all right, if you want to play for the chance to win junk from
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our office, whether or not you have a cute dog to hold up to your skype, send us an e-mail. just tell us who you are, where you're from, and why you want to play the news dump. you could win our unwanted stuff. weekends with alex witt starts right now. storm stories, dangerous weather across parts of the country and today could get worse. what's behind the pentagon's decision to raise the alarm at military base ace cross the u.s.? what's behind the new warning? the bridgegate saga chris christie with a new response to the whole affair at a town hall meeting. waiting on the fallout, whether tom brady will be punished for his role in the deflate gate. detail ace head. good