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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  May 12, 2015 1:00am-2:01am PDT

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most people will take him at his word. he's obviously his own person. eyes a very accomplished leader. but i think this is just the first of many questions that he's going to get that are going to be tough on this. >> michael steele, robert gibbs, thank you both. that is "all in" for this evening. the rachel maddow starts right now. >> thanks to you at home for joining us at this hour. happy monday. one of the things that happens at the onset of allergy season is that either because of allergies or because of the drugs we are all taking as a nation to cope with our allergies right now, everything can feel a little fuzzy. you know what i mean? i, for example, am drinking about five times my normal quotient of caffeine these days to overcome my allergy-induced brain fuzziness. one other option, though, if you need a little brain power boost this time of year, is that you could just wear your brain on the outside. one of the things you can buy at the living miracle that is et ceteray.com is this super creepy, super cool wool beanie, 22 inches in circumference,
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which shows your brain as if it is on the outside of your head. and it's in pretty anatomically appropriate pink. also at etsy, a large variety of eight-foot-long body pillows, designed to be hugged by your whole body in the shape of a giant squid. why stop at just one? you could have a whole family of them. in the earring department, they've got a pretty good run going on moose poop. there are a lot of poop-themed things on etsy. this is poop-shaped tissue box cover. you can pull your tissues right out of the poop pile. a lot of people make hand soap in the shape of dog poop which is funny. here is a $4,000 table lamp showing a doberman doing exactly what you think he's doing. the floor switch is -- yeah. the name of this piece is called "good boy." also a smaller one that's bright red chihuahua. same idea, same switch.
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the poop earrings, though. i've got to say. remarkable, really. they are guaranteed no smell. wild collected moose droppings from maine, according to the maker, that has been dried, coated in polyurethane, bejeweled, in this case with rhinestones and then turned into earrings. actually, in the case of this specific one, it's just earring. this is just one single drop earring. you see in the description there, real moose poop doo-doo nugget. etsy, an amazing thing. americans are entrepreneurial in all sorts of amazing ways. but one woman selling weird earrings on etsy out of her jewelry studio in akron, ohio, had an unexpected run on one of her designs this spring. and it was because of something that happened in colorado. the earrings that she makes and sells on etsy look like this, little upside down ts. she makes them in all sorts of
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different colors. some have glitter, some don't. but what they are, is that they're iuds. they're intrauterine devices. you might remember during the lead up to the election last year, we ended up doing a big run of reporting on iuds in the election, because iuds were unexpectedly right at the center of election politics in colorado last year. colorado over the past five years has had a huge public health success story in reducing the teen pregnancy rate in that state, reducing the teen pregnancy rate and teen birth rate and teen abortion rate. and the way they did it, they had a state program that made it really easy for young women to get iu des, regardless of their insurance status, ability to pay. these earrings are not actual iuds, but the iuds really look just like this, this tiny device. and the basic idea in colorado is that young women should be able to decide whether or not they wanted to be pregnant. they should get access to this contraceptive method, because using a contraceptive method
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like this one would make it their reality they could decide when they wanted to be pregnant and when they did not. >> you know, it's funny, because traditionally, again, that really wasn't the population that we were thinking about with iuds. it really was initially marketed as something for married women who have had, you know, a couple of kids. but again, we're really trying to turn the paradigm on its head, that instead of having to do something every single day to stay nonpregnant, let's just do one thing, make nonpregnant the default state, and then when you want to get pregnant, great, come on in. start your prenatals. we'll take out your iud or implant and you're set to get pregnant. young people have such complex lives. sometimes i'm at my mom's, sometimes at my dad's, sometimes i'm at my apartment, sometimes my boy friend's apartment. i have two part-time jobs and i go to school. try to take a pill at the same time, every day. forget about it.
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and that's why we see the failure rate of pills, patch and ring are actually twice as high for women under 21 as women over 21. it's not that the pharmacology is different. and somehow the medicine doesn't work in young people. it's that it's complex to use. >> so the state of colorado dropped their teen birth rate by 40%. they dropped their teen abortion rate by 35%. over just a really short period of years. four or five years. this is this wildly successful program that kept young women in colorado from getting pregnant when they did not want to. it has been a huge success story. the national family planning and reproductive health association just this year gave colorado an award for having the premier public health program in the country on this issue. and then the day after colorado got that award, colorado voted to kill the program.
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colorado, republicans in the state senate voted to kill that program. and they killed it. republicans did really well in the 2014 elections, almost everywhere in the country. but they did great in colorado in 2014. mark udall lost to cory gardner. colorado state senate had been democratic controlled. flipped to the republicans. democratic governor john hickenlooper did manage to hold on to his job in 2014 but barely. got a scare from bob beaupre. one of the things that bob beaupre campaigned on against john hickenlooper was, that he, bob beaupre, was opposed to the iud. he said he didn't believe in that kind of contraception. he said taxpayers shouldn't be funding that sort of thing in colorado. and that was a significant part of the ground on which that gubernatorial election was contested in 2014. but even though bob beaupre did not win the governorship, enough republicans did win in colorado that year, and the colorado
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senate specifically that bob beaupre ended up getting his way on the iud anyway. it became a republican priority to kill that birth control program that had been so successful, national award-winning, national premier program in terms of public health. and it became their priority to kill it. both the house and the senate needed to overtly vote to continue the funding for that program, and the republicans in control in the senate, zeroed out the funding for it. so it's dead. people thought really hard in colorado to try to hold on to that successful program. that is part of why people -- part of the reason why people bought so many iud earrings off of etsy. iud earrings and also i guess iud lapel pins for the gents. but it was not enough. the best teen pregnancy prevention program in the country just got killed. because republicans took over. in north carolina, we recently reported on the efforts of republicans in that state legislature to unravel their own health care claim to fame.
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the ob-gyn training at the university of north carolina medical schools is considered to be the best in the south. that whole region of the country, nobody is better at training those kinds of doctors than unc is. but north carolina republican legislators recently proposed new anti-abortion legislation that would put unc at risk of losing accreditation for their med school training facilities. by passing a new state law, which would have limited what doctors were allowed to learn or teach or practice doing while they were doing their training at unc. i think when they realized they might be unaccrediting their star state medical school, republican legislators in north carolina backed off that provision they had been pushing. but they're not giving up all together. and what they are moving ahead with now is going to look equally awkward on a bumper sticker. north carolina republicans already tried to change the law, to force women to have medically unnecessary ultrasounds if they wanted to get an abortion in that state. you might remember that
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ultrasound law from north carolina was struck down as unconstitutional earlier this year. well now what they want to do is not only try again to force you to have a medically unnecessary ultrasound, even if you don't want one, even if your doctors don't want you to have one. they're going to make you have it, and then they're going to make you turn it over to them. they're going to force you to share your ultrasound. and put it on file with the state government. because presumably the state government in north carolina has nothing better to do than keep pieces of your medical records in their files so they can keep tabs on you both inside and out. and the great state of tennessee, they just enacted a new law to close clinics across the state. the same way that texas and ohio and wisconsin have done to shut down clinics across the states -- across those three states. oklahoma's governor just signed into law a new three-day mandatory waiting period for any woman who wants to get an abortion in that state. the great state of alabama is
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dealing with a huge catastrophe when it comes to their budget this year. it's a big crisis in that state. they're considering everything up and including gambling statewide in order to deal with this mess they have gotten themselves into. this mess they have gotten themselves into doesn't mean they don't have time to pass more anti-abortion legislation. the state legislature in alabama advanced three new anti-abortion laws in the past week, including one that would effectively ban abortion all together in that state. the great state of arkansas just this year has passed six new laws banning and restricting abortion. the "new york times" reported last week 11 new states have passed 37 new anti-abortion laws already in the first five months of this year. and this is turning out to be a very salient indicator of party politics in our country. i mean, they're just -- i mean, despite the way it gets talked about, there really aren't that many things. that many specific things where if democrats are in control, it goes one way. and if republicans are in control, it goes 1 0 degrees the
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opposite way. usually, yeah, there's things in which the parties disagree, definitely. there is a reason for partisanship. usually it's fuzzy around the edges when it comes to specific policies. a little overlap, a little uncertainty. not on this, though. this is the brightest policy line of them all. everywhere, where republicans are in control, they have been moving to prioritize anti-abortion and increasingly, anti birth control policies. still. still, in 2015. and when democrats are in control, conversely, they try to undo those things. the great state of virginia have odd year elections and as republican as things went nationwide in 2014, virginia went in the opposite direction in 2013, virginia had had a whole slate of republican statewide elected officials from bob mcdonnell and ken cuccinelli down heading to the 2013 elections but in 2013 democrats beat republicans for every statewide race in virginia, and as diligently as republicans had worked in that state to pass new abortion restrictions, the
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democrats know they're in charge have been trying to undo that work. republican ken cuccinelli when he was attorney general in virginia advanced a whole new regulatory system that would have had the effect of shutting down most abortion clinics in that state by order of the state government. last week, the new attorney general who is a democrat who succeeded ken cuccinelli, his name is mark herring, last week mark herring up ended those regulations and ruled they couldn't be used to close down virginia's existing clinics and so virginia's clinics will stay open. there are sharp differences between the parties still on a lot of culture war issues. every republican running for president, all 21 that we know of at this point who are either running or likely to run, all of them, for example, are opposed to gay people having the right to get married. all of them. all of the democrats, hillary clinton included, say the opposite. say they're okay with it. we're going to have another one of these issues come up this
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summer when we get that supreme court ruling in june on the constitutionality of lethal injection. if that ruling, as expected, restarts a national debate on the death penalty, we will find, again, in all likelihood that all the republicans hold one position on that and all the democrats hold the other position. but even as the beltway press has moved on, right, even as the beltway press mostly egg nors this or treats this as an old issue from a previous election, that surprises them every time it keeps coming around. honestly, when you look at what's going on in the country right now, the clearest single active priority for republicans at the local level, state level and federal level, the thing they work on when they work on nothing else is anti-abortion activism. still. 2015. this week in congress, they've got a huge amount of stuff on their plate. most of it being foisted on them by external time tables. a federal judge last week ruled the nsa bulk data collection thing that edward snowden blew the whistle on, a judge ruled
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last week it's unconstitutional. the ruling was the end of last week. by the end of this week, congress has to vote on whether or not to reauthorize that program. that's a pressing matter. we've also got to vote this week on the big defense appropriations bill. they will be studiously ignoring the question whether or not the war against isis in iraq and syria is an authorized war. actually takes active work to keep ignoring that question. while also authorizing this year's pentagon spending and as that fighting goes into its ninth month. there is also a very sensitive issue that's going to come up in that bill, which republicans are all tied up in knots about. it's the question of whether or not you cannen list in the military if you did not come to this country legally. also a very thorny question about whether or not congress can force president obama to keep guantanamo open. that will be part of this defense bill. all of that will be voted on this week in this big defense bill. tomorrow they have also got to that i can their vote in the senate on this trade deal that's turned into a huge fight among democrats. the split between the white house and liberal democrats on whether or not they're going to approve that trade deal. republicans almost never get a chance to showcase democrats hating on each other and talking smack about each other and having big substantive
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disagreements with each other. but they will get that this week with the vote in the -- on the trade deal tomorrow which absolutely divides the democratic party. so there is a lot going on on capitol hill this week. with all different levels of political salience and political danger. but even with all of that happening all at once this week, it doesn't mean there isn't enough time for the republican party's number-one priority. house republicans already tried once this year to pass a new nationwide ban on abortion after 20 weeks. they are going to bring it back again tomorrow. in the middle of all this other stuff going on. after they couldn't get it passed last time, they're bringing it back. now with new rape-related provisions, now there -- as far as i understand it, the language is a little unclear to me. but as far as i can tell, there appears to be what is in effect a waiting period for rape victims. where they want the federal government to force you to sit and wait and think it over, missy, as to whether or not you are sure you do not want to bear
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the rapist's child. so a de facto federal waiting period for rape victims. they're also having a hard time sorting out exactly how lax they want to be on incest victims. so if you get pregnant by your own father or uncle or brother or what have you. republicans in congress have been working hard on the details as to whether or not you'll be allowed to get an abortion after 20 weeks, only if you are age 17 or younger. if you are 18 when your male relative impregnated you, republicans in the house have been having a hard time deciding whether in that instance congress should actually force you to have that baby. this is a bill in which even republican women in the house revolted earlier this year. when the new congress started up this january, this is one of the first pieces of legislation that house republicans decided they needed to move on. kevin mccarthy, house majority leader, still says this is one of the republicans' top three priorities for this year in congress. that they want to get this
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abortion ban passed. but the rape stuff in it, and the incest stuff in it and all the rest of it. they couldn't even get it past their own female members a few weeks ago. they're going back at it tomorrow, because it is -- it is the most salient republican governing priority in this country. if they do nothing else, they do this. the beltway press never covers it that way. but that is exactly what's going on. still. joining us now is congresswoman diana degette, co chair of the pro choice caucus in the house. nice to see you. >> good to be with you, rachel. >> so i will admit to being fuzzy on the language as to what has ended up being in this new iteration of the house republicans' abortion ban. do you understand what it is they're going to ask for a vote on in terms of these rape and incest provisions and all the rest? >> well, it just seems like they keep doubling down on the burdens on these victims. the rape -- what we understand is that the rape victims will now have to prove in writing that they made a complaint to a
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government agency or law enforcement agency. and same thing with the incest victims. which is just appalling to me to say somebody who has been the victim of incest now is required to report that to a law enforcement official or she can't get an abortion. i mean, once again, they are just -- they're just revictimizing the victims. it's the same kind of outrageous language that did make the republican women walk the last time. they had to pull the bill from the floor, which is a first for me. i haven't seen something like that. and now this just looks like they're making it even worse. >> so i mean, the implication of this is -- and i mean, i don't want to put words in their mouths. but the implication of this to me is they believe that women are faking being victims of incest. so as to access abortions they wouldn't otherwise legally be able to get under a law like this. if you have to prove written documentation, that implies your word isn't strong enough.
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>> right. i think you're right. what they're saying is, that women who just want to have abortions after 20 weeks, which is very rare anyway. are going to now fake being a rape or incest victim in order to get it. it's just ludicrous. and it is so disrespectful to women in general, and to rape and incest victims. it's just appalling. >> do -- is it your sense that the republicans have i guess gotten past the objections within their own caucus, particularly women in their own republican caucus, and they do have a way to pass this? do you think this is something that ultimately is going to end up on president obama's desk? >> well, i -- when i first heard they were bringing it up this week again, i thought they must have watered it down somehow or something to get people's approval. when i looked at the language today, i really couldn't believe that they could have anymore support than they had before. because i think the bill is worse. and so i'll be shocked if all
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these republican women and some of the more moderate republican men vote for it. if they do, it will go to the senate. i can't imagine that they could get 60 votes in the senate over there. but i'll guarantee you, president obama will veto it if it comes to his desk. >> congresswoman diana degette of colorado, who is the chair of the pro choice caucus in the house and from a state that has had its own roller coaster ride on these issues recently. thanks very much for being with us. nice to have you here. >> thanks, rachel. lots more ahead, including another major front in the culture wars that the beltway media is underreporting. but don't worry, there's others of us around too. please stay with us. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or have a guy refinish my floors? absolutely! or send someone out to groom my pookie? pookie's what you call your? my dog. yes, we can do that. real help from real people. come see what the new angie's list can do for you.
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we've got lots ahead tonight, including stories you will not see anywhere else. including one from the state of vermont. the lovely state of vermont, continuing to be a big surprise for not good reasons. stay with us.
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so in january, the speaker of the house in new york was arrested. on federal corruption charges. that was the speaker of the house. then last week, the leader of the state senate was arrested too. on totally different charges. but federal corruption charges, as well. the estate senate guy is charged basically with doing public favors for companies that paid money to his son. one problem, new york republicans have faced in terms of replacing him as head of the senate now that he's been arrested and indicted is that the number two republican in the state senate was also arrested and indicted last year, also on federal corruption charges, also for allegedly doing favors for companies who he wanted to help
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out his son. hey! legislators find it hard enough to decide what to do when their leadership gets indicted and arrested, even without the next in line guy having been indicted and arrested for the exact same thing. but today they decided in new york that the state senate president would step down from his leadership job while he prepares to go on trial, and they did have to skip down the list a little bit to find the next guy. but they did pick a replacement for the state senate president, who isn't actively under indictment. nor has he been arrested any time in recent memory. although i better check my notes. so congratulations there, new york state legislature. might even feel weird now to have absolutely no federal charges pending against one of your legislative leaders. for a minute. and it isn't often that anybody besides new jersey really truly competes with new york for the lowest stinking ring in the ethical sewer of state legislative politics. but this week, the competition comes from an unexpectedly nice place.
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it comes from vermont. where one veteran state senator is making local news reporters in vermont say things they probably never thought they would have to say on tv in their whole vermont careers. >> 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 farm hands for more money. >> on thursday, state senator norm mccaliforniaster was arrested by vermont police at the state capitol during a break in the senate debates. two other republican state senators briefly interceded with the police and said they were acting his his lawyers as he was being arrested and questioned. following morning, friday morning, he was charged with three counts of felony sexual assault and three counts of prohibited acts. the criminal complaint against
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him alleges a pattern of assaults on multiple women, going back several years. state police say they know of three alleged victims so far, but they say there may be more. that was friday. since then, it's been reported that the senator's alleged crimes may be worse than what was in the criminal complaint. one of the accusers telling the vermont paper, she may have been as young as 15 when the senator, she says, first assaulted her on his farm. she went on to be his assistant at the vermont statehouse, where she claims the assaults continued in the mt. pellier apartment he shared with two other lawmakers. that's what's unfolding in vermont. here's the thing. the senator is apparently not stepping down. still serving as a senator while out on bail on these charges. vermont's governor has called on him to resign. the speaker of the house has called on him to resign. they're all democrats, though, and he's a republican. but then the state's top-ranking republican, lieutenant governor, said yes, senator mccoloradoster
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would resign. but apparently nobody told senator mcallister that, and he would not resign and say he plans to. he also told the "burlington free press" he has had, quote, had better days. he set a new bar for horrifying indictment of a sitting lawmaker. it remains to be seen whether he will also set a new bar for legislators who continue to serve while under that horrifying indictment. watch this space. this absolutely disgusting space. to commemorate the '70s
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to commemorate the '70s victory of the nazi surrender in world war ii, russia threw a giant party in moscow over the weekend. one of russian president vladimir putin's buddies who came to moscow for the parade was mr. putin's best american friend, steven seagal. one time but no longer pony-tailed 1990s action hero. >> you know, you should want knock chinese possessions. i have something in my pocket right now that will completely clear up that bruise on your forehead. >> what bruise? >> while steven seagal's presence at the victory parade this weekend was admittedly weird, both in russian terms and international terms, it was not the weirdest thing that happened at that parade. and that is just ahead with pictures. please stay with us.
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progressive insurance here and i'm a box who thrives on the unexpected. ha-ha! shall we dine? [ chuckle ] you wouldn't expect an insurance company to show you their rates and their competitors' rates but that's precisely what we do. going up! nope, coming down. and if you switch to progressive today you could save an average of over 500 bucks. stop it. so call me today at the number below. or is it above? dismount! oh, and he sticks the landing!
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so if the news cycle ever lets me out of the office again, this might be where i go first. >> the new great passion play.
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in the small victorian village of eureka springs, arkansas in the beautiful ozark mountains is america's number-one outdoor drama. see the story of the passion of christ up close. close enough to hear the cheering followers as they lay palm branches as he enters jerusalem. close enough to hear the wheels and the horses' hooves upon the cobble streets. close enough to hear the donkeys and the sounds of the marketplace. these sights and sounds will transport you and your senses back over 2,000 years into the very heart of the greatest story ever told. >> the great passion play runs every year in the warm months in eureka springs, arkansas. it's been seen by millions of people over the past half century from may until october every year. you can take the holy land tour, you can get close enough to hear the donkeys. you can also see the gigantic christ of the ozark's statue. this is eureka springs,
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arkansas, part of the ozark mountains by fayetteville. known for its natural springs, which are supposed to be good for you. known for its passion play, big christ statue. known for its arts festival, a cool place that attracts and welcomes everybody. generally. eureka springs is a small town, only a couple thousand people live there. this is the local government. city council can spit around party table and talk it out. they debated a recommendation for how to throw away yard waste and another for repairing a parking lot by the town auditorium. they debated a measure to ban circus animals from town which they decided to do. while attending lolley to the business of eureka springs, state lawmakers were also in session. the arkansas legislature decided in their infinite wisdom they as a state would ban local cities and towns from passing anti
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discrimination laws. the state legislature banned arkansas cities and towns from making that decision on their own. because the eureka springs council could see that bill working its way toward their relatively gay-friendly tourist town in arkansas, they preemptively passed a anti discrimination ordinance for eureka springs. all present voted aye. it was unanimous. they were not the first town to try this in a red state or even within arkansas. last summer, the city council and the college town of fayetteville also passed a civil rights ordinance for their town. but then the fayetteville civil rights organization got put up for repeal. the graffiti is a little hard to read but it's a three-letter word that starts with an f and ends with a g. fayetteville, arkansas, lost its discrimination ordinance, got put up for referendum and lost. same thing happened last month in springfield, missouri. passed a nondiscrimination bill but then the bill was struck
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down in a voter referendum. the college town of starkville, mississippi, got themselves a big profile in the "new york times" because of their progressive policies in deepest, mississippi. but then the same officials who voted in those nondiscrimination policies then voted to take them away. and then we have the little town of eureka springs, arkansas, where they passed their civil rights ordinance, city council level, but that ordinance is up for repeal. decision time in eureka springs. it's a voter referendum. the residents of eureka springs voting tomorrow on whether or not they want to keep their new equality ordinance or whether they want to erase it from the books. the side trying to throw the thing out says the vote is, quote, basically a crapshoot. could go either way. the side trying to keep the nondiscrimination ordinance sees it as the right thing to do. the counselor tells the a.p. today, quote, we don't go by convention. somebody else us you can't do something, watch us. the big arc of gay rights in this country the last few years
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has been toward more. the shorter term story of gay rights, particularly in the south has been toward less. we are experiencing a short term period of backlash, at least in the south. this effort to rescind existing discrimination provisions that protect gay people. that mini trend is going to get a test tomorrow in eureka springs, which may tell us more about how big a trend this actually is. joining us now is andrew demillo of the associated press. thanks very much for being with us. >> thanks for having me. >> so eureka springs sees itself very much as a tourist town. they market themselves very well, even nationally, not just throughout the south as a tourist town. what sort of powers that be in town and businesses there think about this referendum? >> you know, when you walk around downtown eureka springs, you see a lot of signs in favor of keeping the ordinance. as you referred to, you're okaya springs kind of as an
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interesting dichotomy there, the great passion play and christ of the ozarks which attracts tens of thousands of people each year. this is also a town known as very lgbt-friendly community. very inclusive. very artsy community. and these are both very important parts of the town's identity. and this is really kind of a kind of test to the relationship between those two identities. >> as far as you can tell, could you predict what's going to happen tomorrow? do you feel you know which way this is going to go? >> it's -- you know, it's very hard to predict. it's a special election, especially a town of its size, a little over 2,000 people. only 1,600, 1,700 of whom are registered voters. my understanding is they have had early voting the last week. they actually had at least 400 people cast early ballots. which is, you know, very strong turnout. very strong turnout for special
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election. and i think it's something that the supporters of the ordinance see as very encouraging sign. >> in terms of supporters of the nondiscrimination ordinance in terms of keeping it, they see that as a positive sign. >> yes. >> from your perch in little rock, and when you look at the gay rights politics that are happening right now around the marriage issue, religious freedom bill that came up in arkansas and other states, do you feel like there is a backlash that is against those things that is organic? or are those types of advances and those types of debates just sort of being harnessed by people who have a preexisting interest in this issue and are using this moment to try to push the agenda they have wanted to go forward with anyway? >> you're definitely seeing a backlash. at the local level to this. before eureka springs tomorrow, we have seen cities of little rock and hot springs pass anti discrimination ordinances more limited dealing with city employees, city vendors, plats
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key county, the most populus county and where little rock is located, looking at a similar ordinance. and this is really kind of a local pushback to the restriction on these anti discrimination ordinances but also as you mentioned, the religious freedom measure in arkansas. so you are seeing kind of this local pushback, and really the pushback being kind of based on a business argument from these cities who are saying they want to send a different message than what they thought was sent during the legislative session here. >> andrew demillo, capital correspondent for the a.p. in little rock, fascinating to see how this goes tomorrow. thanks for helping us understand. appreciate it. >> thank you. all right. lots more still to come. did you see the speech the first lady just gave? have you seen this? you have not seen anything like this if you have not seen this exact thing. that and more ahead. stay with us.
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this is a thing that just happened. imagine $180 million. picturing that? $180 million.
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now, which would you rather have? would you rather have $180 million or would you rather have this? there is at least one person in the world who finds that to be a difficult question. this is a pablo picasso work called le fem, painted in 1955 and want to set the world record as the most expensive work of art ever sold at auction. $179,365,000. you give christie's that much money, they give you this. that is an exchange that just happened.
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sometimes 80 years is not too late to right a wrong. this is how the united states military academy at west point is trying to make something right for one of their cadets who graduated 79 years ago. these are new barracks for west point cadets, and they're going to be named after this gentleman. his name is benjamin o. davis jr., from washington, d.c. he was the son of a career army officer, and west point was willing to let him in as an african-american cadet in 1932, but they were not willing to accept him once he was there. cadets who violate the honor code are treated to something they call silencing, where no one will speak to you except on an official as-needed basis. no one would speak to him. no one would allow them to sit with him to eat, no one would be his friend. he roomed alone. and all of that went on for the whole four years that he was
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there. four years. try that and see how you would do. before benjamin o. davis got there, west point had not graduated a single african-american cadet in the whole 20th century. benjamin o. davis jr. for those four years he was frozen out, tormented for the whole time he was there, but he persevered, graduated in the top 15% of his class. this class that hated him for being black. and he went on to a very distinguished military career. he was an original tuskegee airmen, commanded the red tails, one of the army pioneers who helped create the united states air force. he became the first-ever african-american air force general. and now west point will house 650 cadets in a six-story building they are naming for him on campus. the head of west point's history department saying today benjamin o. davis' career, quote, was not west point at its finest hour, but this is a chance for west point to recognize one of its finest.
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first lady michelle obama gave the commencement speech in alabama this weekend. she talked about what it meant to be the site for the airfield and the flight school for american's pioneering african-american pilots. >> instead of being defined by the discrimination and the doubts of those around them, they became one of the most successful pursuit squadrons in our military. they went onto show the world that if black folks and white folks could fight together and fly together, then surely, surely they could eat at a lunch counter together. surely their kids could go to school together. >> first lady michelle obama speaking this weekend talking about the tuskegee airmen of world war ii. she also went onto talk in personal terms about something i'm not sure she has talked about in public before.
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it has gone viral in the couple days that she gave that speech. this is why. this is something she does not often talk about in public. but watch this. >> back when my husband first started dam paining for president, folks had all sorts of questions of me. what kind of first lady would i will. what kinds of issues would i take on. would i will more like hillary clinton or nancy reagan. those same questions would have been posed to any candidate spouse. but as potentially the first african-american first lady, i was also the focus of another set of questions and speculations, conversations sometimes rooted in the fears and misperceptions of others. was i too loud or too angry or too emasculating.
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or was i too soft, too much of a mom, not enough of a career woman. then there was the first time i was on a magazine cover. it was a cartoon drawing of me with a huge afro and a machine gun. yeah, it was satire. but if i'm really being honest, that knocked me back a bit. it made me wonder, just how are people seeing me. or you might remember the on stage celebratory first bump between me and my husband after a primary win that was referred to as a terrorist fist jab. over the years folks have used plenty of interesting words to describe me. one said i exhibited a little bit of uppityism. another noted i was one of my husbands crownies of color. cable news referred to me as
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obama's baby mama. but eventually, i realized that if i wanted to keep my sanity and not let others define me, there was only one thing i could do. and that was to have faith in god's plan for me. [ applause ] i had to ignore all of the noise and be true to myself and the rest would work itself out. >> first lady michelle obama speaking to graduating students this weekend in alabama. honestly just a remarkable speech from her on a subject she can speak to in a way that no one else can. we have posted a link to the whole thing. i highly recommend you check it out. we'll be right back. one night britta told me about a tradition in denmark, "when a person dies," she said "someone must open
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the window so the soul can depart." i smiled and squeezed her hand. "not tonight, britta. not tonight." [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you, from johnson & johnson.
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russia is a gas station mass ka raiding as a country. it's corruption, it's a nation that is really only dependent upon oil and gas for their economy. >> a gas station disguised as a country. one of john mccain's most lines. like most really good lines, it wasn't all that true. russia is also one of the world's greatest suppliers of military hardware, weapons. and their crown jewel right now is this shiny new tank. the t-14 armada. the base model weighs 48 tons. it's able to reach speeds of more than 50 miles per hour. apparently the main gun can fire multiple types of different ammunition with a range of nearly five miles. it has an unmanned turret that uses radar to detect incoming threats. they've even reported that it could at some point be fully
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remote controlled. it could be a drone tank. american outlets have been pretty impressed by the specs. russia is very excited about this new piece of weaponry and the international props they're getting for it. this past weekend, it was finally unveiled to the russian public commemorating the 70th ap versery of the nazi surrender. then a bad thing happened. it broke down. it broke down at the dress rehearsal. russia rolled out its newest tank. in the middle of them rolling it out, it just stopped rolling. they tried to tow it away, but they couldn't. they did eventually get it moving again. it was embarrassing, right? so much so that initially they tried to pretend that it had
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stopped awkwardly on purpose. that was at least just during the dress rehearsal. during the actual v.e. day parade, it drove like a dream. no more stalls, no problems. frankly almost every piece of russian weaponry was impressive and imposing. almost every piece performed flawlessly. it was a different model this time and a different problem, but this time this other tank -- the problem was it caught on fire. it's never good. would be bad enough if it wasn't also a tank carrying missiles while it was on fire. the tank was successfully towed away. the missile didn't blow up. a couple of rough moments for one of the world's biggest weaponry suppliers.
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russia's s.e.a.l. time performed flawlessly. long way you wave. >> it's tuesday, may 12th. bye bye brady. the nfl comes down hard on super bowl mvp. does the punishment fit the crime? wicked weather so bad horses had to be lassoed for rescue. an balance caught in the rising waters and the massive tornado cleanup continues. what are the best and worst mid sized suvs? the the test results in in and we have them. this picasso sold for around more than the asking price of $140 million. and a tour bus miracle. >> thanks for joining us. we want to begin with breaking news this morning out of nepal. another strong