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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  December 30, 2015 6:00pm-7:01pm PST

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i picked as winner, not a cultural winner, per se, but these four women called the peacemaker thars that were the women -- their loved ones were killed in charleston. that they could go into court and look at that murderer and say, i forgive you, was stunning. >> my winners, miranda, who made hamilton, and steph curry, every time i get bummed. at the very least, the earth is going to melt, but we have steph curry. thank you all. that is "all in" for"the rachel now with melissa harris-perry in for rachel. >> thanks, chris. have a happy new year. >> you too. >> thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. rachel has the night off. last year on veterans day, the city of philadelphia invited one of its native sons to give a speech. he was a former navy man who had gone on to make the city proud in the entertainment world. and the city asked him to speech at philadelphia's all wars memorial to colored speakers.
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that was bill cosby, and they saluted him. ed rendell thanked him for all he had done for the city. the congressman declared, quote, we need to have bill cosby month in philadelphia. that right there is how philadelphia felt about bill cosby as recently as a year ago. it's hard to overstate how beloved bill cosby has been, for decades in his native philly. here he is being presented with the distinguished pennsylvania artist award by governor dick thornburgh in 1984. he's featured in murals around the city, including one that puts him up there, well, the late nelson mandela. bill cosby regularly headlined philadelphia civic events and youth athletic fens aevents and benefits for education. when there was a spike in homicide rates in 2007, it was bill cosby who led the march against violence. at his philadelphia alma mater, temple university, cosby gave commencement addresses and attended games.
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he served on the university's board of trustees for more than three decades. and in 2004, a former temple employee accused bill cosby of drugging and sexually assaulting her at his home in montgomery county, in the philadelphia suburbs. cosby denied the indication and the montgomery county district attorney declined to file charges against cosby, saying there was not enough evidence. the woman filed a civil lawsuit against cosby, which got settled out of court, and bill cosby's defense lawyer in that case was the chairman of the temple university board of trustees. that was ten years ago. and if you want just one barometer of how much the public attitude towards bill cosby has changed since then, i give you the newly elected district attorney of montgomery county, pennsylvania, kevin steele. now, steele won his election this past november, an election in suburban philadelphia, an election in the county where philadelphia's favorite son, bill cosby, lives, he won that election by running against bill cosby. >> for district attorney in
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montgomery county, kevin steele. first assistant d.a. with a 98% conviction rate and tough sentences for sexual predators. or bruce castor, a former d.a. who refused to prosecute bill cosby. castor said, we don't charge people for making a mistake or doing something foolish. many more victims came forward and castor admitted they could have used his testimony against cosby, but castor didn't even try. bruce castor was not looking out for the victims. >> today, kevin steele made good on his campaign promise and bill cosby appeared at montgomery county magistrate court to face three charges of aggravated indecent assault, a second-degree felony. the statute of limitations on the 2004 assault was due to expire next month and the alleged victim in the case is andrea constand. she had been the director of operations for the temple women's basketball team, where she had developed a friendship with cosby. and according to the criminal complaint filed today, constand, quote, considered cosby, 37
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years her senior, to be a mentor, and described instances in which he invited her to his home for dinner, invited her to restaurants, invited her to events, introduced her to people, and provided her with guidance and career advice. constand says cosby invited her to his house one night in january 2004 to discuss her future career plans. and while she was there, he gave her pills, he said would help her with her stress. instead, according to constand, the pills nearly knocked her out. and while she was barely conscious and unable to resist or consent, cosby assaulted her. when andrea constand first made these allegations in 2004, she was very much on her own. but over the last year, dozens of women have made similar allegations against mr. cosby, allegations that span decades, many of which are strikingly similar to constand's. a mentor/mentee relationship, unwanted advances, pills, sexual assault. and in a deposition unsealed this past summer, a deposition cosby gave in that civil suit constand filed in 2005, the one
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where cosby was represented by the chair of the temple board of trustees, in this newly unsealed deposition, bill cosby admitted that he developed relationships with women in order to pursue sex. he admitted that he gave quaaludes to women. but he insisted it was always consensual. and the pills were kind of a party drug, not the malicious tool of a sexual predator. bill cosby and his representatives have always denied all of these allegations. he has sued some of his accusers for defamation. this is the first time he's ever been charged with anything related to these accusations. his lawyer released a statement today, reading, quote, the charge by the montgomery county district attorney's office came as no surprise. filed 12 years after the alleged incident can coming on the heels of a hotly contested election for this county's d.a., during which the case was made the focal point. make no mistake, we intend to mount a vigorous defense against this unjustified charge, and we expect that mr. cosby will be
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exonerated by a court of law. by a court of law. 12 years after andrea constand stood up and accused bill cosby, america's dad, public moralist, philadelphia's favorite son, of sexual assault. 12 years later bill cosby is going to be tried in a court of law. he's no longer on temple university's board. his name has been removed from various college scholarships and buildings. two dozen colleges and universities have rescinded honorary degrees they gave him. cosby show reruns have been yanked from tv and a new cosby sitcom canceled. his statue has been taken down at disney world. and that mural of him in philadelphia, it's been painted over. the removal of bill cosby from his cultural pedestal seems pretty complete, but the legal saga, and what it means for miss constand and potentially for all of bill cosby's other accusers, well, that story is just beginning. so joining us now is scott
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bolden, criminal defense attorney and former new york city sex krims prosecutor. mr. bolden, thank you for your time tonight. >> thank you for having me. >> talk to me first about whether or not you think there will be a trial, or whether or not this is likely to be settled out of court in the way that the civil suit was? >> well, i doubt it will be settled out of court like the civil suit, because it's either a plea bargain or it's not. and mr. cosby and his team don't seem to be in a settling mood or a plea bargaining mood. they're countersuing the other women and they've said in their public statement that they're going to mount a vigorous defense. so there will be a trial. there'll probably be a preliminary hearing on january 14th. the victim will probably have to appear, even though hearsay is admissible to prove a prema fascia case before the judge, at least, for the case to go forward. so a lot to watch between now and january 14th. >> so you did a little legal narrative there that if you
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hadn't gone to law school, you might have missed. talk to me what you mean when you talk about hearsay and this case. what does that mean we might actually be seeing in this case? >> hearsay is not allowed in the court of law. in the court of public opinion, you can make all kinds of accusations and say whatever you want, but it gets real tough in criminal law, because the government has the burden of proof, beyond a reasonable doubt. and hearsay, that is, if you heard a second or third person say something, that's usually not reliable. but there are exceptions to that. to prove modus operandi. to prove mistake or to disprove that this was a mistake or some misunderstanding between cosby and the victim here. and so -- or if it's a prior inconsistent statement, or prior statement that's sworn in another court, like you have here with the deposition, there are ways through witnesses to get those statements in. then, secondly, you have the other victims, who will want to testify. the prosecutor will want them to testify, because that will buttress their claim. without them, and without the deposition testimony, it's her
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word against his word. and the government has a lot of challenges. this was reported about a year ago. they were friends, she went to the house after she had spurned his advances on several occasions. she actually took the wine, took the drugs, and so forth and so on. now, that doesn't mean she wasn't raped or violated. i'm not suggesting that at all. but these are challenges, because the facts -- because the government has to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt, and the cosby defense team is investigating her right now and will put her under withering cross-examination to attack her credibility. because in the end, it will be up to the jury. do they believe bill cosby or do they believe the victim? and those are the challenges for both sides. >> so, what you've just said there, i think, is probably one of the reasons that a majority of rapes and sexual assaults go unreported altogether, much less ever finding their way into a courtroom. when you talk about the withering kind of discourse that is likely to occur relative to
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this young woman, now 12 years older than she was at that time. but the very idea that it is so difficult to make a case here, given your work as a prosecutor, what is the key for when a jury believes the accuser versus the person who is accused? >> well, her statements have to be consistent, over a 12-year period of time. secondly, she's got to have a lot of support around her. it's one thing to say, i'm going to testify on behalf of the prosecution, it's a completely another thing to stay on the team. to stay in the game. so many victims, even if they testify before a grand jury, walk away. whether it's because of their family situation or the stress or what they're facing. and here, i don't think there's going to be a bigger case since o.j. simpson, and she's going to be under a lot of stress and a lot of media spotlight. and so, the government has to support her in the sense of keeping in touch with her, doing their own investigation, in regard to corroborating her
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statements, when she told her family members, follow-up conversations with cosby, because her mom is going to be a key witness. her mom had followed conversations with cosby, and if you believe what's in the allegation or in the charge, he made certain ambitions to her. so you've got to stay close to her, even though she's in canada, you've got to support her and empower her and make sure she gets on the stand, tells the truth, and prepare her for cross-examination. she does well in that regard, the jury is going to have a hard time not believing her. >> a. scott bolden, criminal defense attorney and former new york city sex crimes prosecutor, thank you for your time tonight. >> thank you for having me. >> bill cosby's arrest today is complicated. and there is more on that ahead. plus, the growing fight among the republicans who want to be president that really just doesn't have anything to do with donald trump. we'll be right back. ter what nad symptoms you get, alka seltzer plus liquid gels rush liquid fast relief to your tough cold symptoms. and they outsell mucinex liquid gels 2 to 1.
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cosby was charged with sexual assault. arraigned in a pennsylvania courthouse and released on a $1 million bail. he denied this charge in the past as he has denied all the accusations from other women. but no matter the outcome of this case in pennsylvania, this moment is an important public knowled acknowledgement that even though many years have passed, there's still the responsibility to take charges of sexual assault seriously. the images today were also of a black man and one who's been an icon of american culture for more than four decades, taking a perp walk. and that is uncomfortable, even if you believe it is right for him to be charged, it is particularly jarring when just two days ago, yet another grand jury decided not to indict officers involved in the fatal shooting death of an african-american child in cleveland, 12-year-old tamir rice. even if you think it is right for bill cosby to face charges, it's impossible to ignore that the system which just charged him is a system that has been indicted by a national social
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movement, as being unable or unwilling to deliver meaningful and just outcomes. bill cosby will stand trial for sexual assault. the officer in cleveland who shot and killed a 12-year-old boy will not. data from the department of justice show that for every 100 ra rapes, only two assailants will spend anytime in jail. the other 98 will not. as shocking as those numbers are, it's even more unlikely that a police officer who shoots and kills a civilian will spend anytime in jail. new data compiled by "the washington post" show that although thousands of american civilians have been killed by police officers in the past decade, only 11 officers have been convicted. 11, out of thousands. in an entire decade. the reaction so far should be sober and complicated. perhaps what we saw today was the first step towards justice for dozens of alleged victims. or maybe it was just another black man walking into a system that so rarely seems to offer
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justice. joining me now is jamiel lamu, the senior editor at "ebony" magazine. thanks for being here. >> thank you for having me. >> so this one's hard for me. i'm a sexual assault survivor. i have long felt like mr. cosby needed to be held accountable. but i keep wondering if this is a system that can bring that accountability. >> i think your framing is so important, sober and complicated is this moment. this isn't a victory lap. no one's excited, for those of us who have been covering this story for quite some time. we're not whooping and saying, yes, got him. there's no joy to be had seeing any black man taking a peppe ii walk. yet, this is an important moment and i can't say i'm not glad it's happening, because accountability is important. and that's for us as close to justice as we're going to get. >> one of the most extraordinary moments over the course of this year as we've seen the change in american public opinion towards mr. cosby was the "ebony" cover
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of the shattered cosby show. and i don't think of us who were kids in the '80s can feel anything more than that. and although it's mr. cosby who's shattered in the middle, it's all of those young actors who were part of that ensemble past. how much of us is broken at this moment? >> i think there's so much of us broken for americans and particularly african-americans, right? and so just as those cracks went across felicia rashad and those child actors, i think they were felt all across black america, right? we looked up to this man. we wanted to believe the things he said to us, prior to his respectability, politics, big reveal, you know, the things that he wanted to teach us about being a black family and having class aspirations and supporting hbcus and those in many ways were valuable, important things. but this legacy is incredibly complicated. and frankly, i think it's impossible to separate fully some 50 plus allegations of sexual misconduct or sexual assault from who he is as a philanthropist or an actor. >> and we don't want to separate
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them, right? it's important to me that it's hannibal burris making a joke about the respectability politics thing that ultimately undoes this. and i keep thinking to myself, we were ultimately more interested as a people, not just black folks, as americans, in preserving this image, this imagined notion of bill cosby, than in understanding actual women's experiences and allegations. and i don't mean that one is true or not. we don't know, but that we were simply more -- we didn't even engage. we didn't even go into and figure out if it might be true. >> and i can't help but to wonder, say if mr. cosby didn't have that sort of respectability politics, you know, heavy-handed against single mothers and complicated-sounding names and wearing your pants low and listening to hip hop, say that wasn't who he was. say that he was a supporter of the black lives matter movement, right? say that he was elected. say that he was really on our side quote/unquote politically. would we be having this conversation? how willing would people be to turn their backs on him?
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or to say, i may love what you stand for here, but i cannot stand in solidarity against you when you have these allegations against you. it's not about me not liking your personality, it's about me not being okay with sexual assault. >> and not being okay with respectability politics. i don't care if that fissure breaks open and makes us feel as if someone can earn equality as a citizen. you don't earn it. >> or so it should be. >> jahmell, thank you for your time tonight. we have much more ahead. stay with us. you both have a perfect driving record. perfect. no tickets. no accidents.
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a lot can happen in a year, and here's what we've reported on this show, exactly one year ago today. check it out, it's kind of amazing. >> former florida governor jeb bush surging to the top of the field in a new poll of likely republican presidential contenders. bush winning 23% of the vote. new jersey governor chris christie trailing him by ten points. >> on the republican side, former governor jeb bush now breaking away a bit from the field, ahead of governor chris christie by double digits. >> could we be looking now as we turn to politics at another bush versus clinton showdown? we have a new poll that shows jeb with a commanding lead as the gop front-runner for president. >> the bush surge. the jeb bush surge. that was the other big story, maybe you heard this week. there was a new poll that came out from our friends at cnn. and a lot of people interpreted it not just at cnn, but everywhere, interpreted it as jeb bush. he announces a few weeks ago he's really interested in running for president. now we have a new poll.
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now he's ahead. i don't think we're in interpreting this thing the right way. i think there's a lot more to this jeb bush story. take a look at this. these are all the polls in national polls that have been taken in the last few months, that match up, mitt romney, jeb bush, krachris christie. the three big hitters on the republican side. and look at this. every single one of these polls in the last few months, reputable polls, shows mitt romney beating jeb bush by 11, by 9, by 5, by 8. so this idea that jeb bush has suddenly surged to the front of the republican pack and is this commanding front-runner right now, i'm not buying it. >> a year ago today, everyone was talking about how jeb bush was surging in the polls with a commanding lead. but our own steve kornacki, the prescient young mind that he is, was skeptical of just how commanding that lead was. and he made sure that we knew not to believe the hype. turns out steve was right. jeb's front-runner status was short lived, to say the least. but who could have predicted
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that the republican front-runner today would be someone that we were not even thinking about a year ago. donald trump was not even on anyone's radar back then and mike pence was getting more attention than he was. in so many ways, the republican presidential field, even the whole republican party today looks nothing like it did a year ago. in other ways, it looks just the same. and there's more on that coming up, so stay with us. hey man! hey peter. (unenthusiastic) oh... ha ha ha! joanne? is that you? it's me... you don't look a day over 70. am i right? jingle jingle. if you're peter pan, you stay young forever. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. ♪ you make me feel so young... it's what you do. ♪ you make me feel ♪ so spring has sprung. how with directv you could put tvs anywhere and not see cable wires and boxes in every room. why can't we get people to just say
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this is the preliminary round at the world darts championship this month. yes, many people consider darts a sport, with a live audience and very excited fans and competitors who aren't hitting the bull's-eye. remind you of something? >> he said, a week or so ago, that he was completely opposed to the new spending bill in congress. absolutely opposed. it's awful, it's terrible. so i'm like, this is great, okay, marco's opposed to this. that's good. i can't wait to turn on c-span 2, but he gives a good speech, marco. and i want to hear his stirring speech that's going to try to persuade people on the floor of the senate not to vote for this awful spending bill. except he never showed up. dude, show up to work and vote no. right? show up to work and vote no. and if you don't want to, just quit. >> senator, this morning, chris christie said, dude, show up to work, show up to work and vote and if you dona't want to, quit.
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>> i'm running for president and it will require me to miss some votes. >> which governor laid out a tough plan to destroy isis months before the paris attacks? jeb bush. >> over the last three years, rubio has missed important national security hearings and missed more total votes than any other senator. politics first, that's the rubio way. >> okay, so do you get it? a big part of the republican 2016 race is now basically a bunch of establishment republicans going after each other. chris christie going after marco rubio. rubio firing back, john kasich going after jeb bush. and if all of that is not enough, today rand paul jumped into the mix. and while the establishment republican candidates are busy doing this, attacking each other, and doing everything they can to bring each other down, they seem to be missing the bull's-eye. they're missing the targets. the leading nonestablishment
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republican candidate for president, donald trump, is just sailing past them in the polls. he is still surging. he is basically killing them all. and as we watch republican candidates like scott walker and rick perry and bobby jindal and jeb bush and chris christie, guys who are either out or who are really struggling to stay in, it might seem like the republican party is no longer a very strong party. there may be people who use the republican label, but the party itself might feel like it's in a bit of disarray. and that might be true, if the single measure that you use for understanding the health of a party is its ability to choose its presidential nominee. listen, that's one good measure, but that is clearly an insufficient measure of health. so let's take another temperature reading of the republican party. the republican party currently controls 32 governorships across the country. and then they control 30 state houses.
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and between those two numbers, they have a total control of 23 states. that means statehouses and governorships, democrats by comparison, have seven. it's a whole part of the country that is entirely red. and if you don't know how important that is, ask yourself about obamacare. so, maybe this democratic president did and can get comprehensive health care reform passed, but notice, medicaid is not expanded in any of these dark red states. the republican party may not be able to repeal obamacare, but it certainly, through its state legislatures and governorships, has managed to halt obamacare's full impact. its ability, if it had been completely implemented and understood, as the democratic president imagined it would be. and, yes, there are some overwhelmingly conservative states that have managed to take the expansion, and no, where has that been a bigger story than in the great state of kentucky, where the state became a national model, taking the medicaid expansion and then a
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republican one, the governorship of kentucky, and said that he would roll that expansion back. which is currently in the works. and so while that is in motion, the most recent news out of kentucky is that a democrat in the kentucky legislature, who just switched parties. he's a republican now. he's the second democrat since november, when the republican party made gains in the state, to switch over to the other side. so elections, state and local elections, man, do they have consequences. partly for people who are governed, because when a certain party wins, everybody wants to play on your team. and even when you're not winning, even if you have a strong chance of holding on to the very top post for democrats, the question starts to become, what is happening further down there, where the republicans seem to be winning. joining us now is the former chairman of the south carolina republican party, mr. dawson. thanks to have you with us tonight. >> good evening, melissa. thank you for having me. so talk to me a little bit about this. because i do feel like there's
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this republican party establishment is in disarray. that's the story that the donald trump surge seems to tell. but, man, y'all are kind of running the board in the rest of the country. >> you know, i would say, nationally, we're a little disfuncti disfunctional. and that is not unusual. this has been a cycle that we've talked about before on your other show. donald trump has changed the rule and so have the stations and the media coverage. the folks like myself that do this for a living, we were expecting a regular campaign had built the databases, done all the new social media, learned our lessons from obama whipping us twice on how to do voter contact, and then donald trump gets in it and turns it into a national election. so we were looking for the rick perries, the scott walkers, the bobby jindals, all to probably still be on the stage now. they're all gone and trump has sucked the oxygen out of this race right now. and made it a national race courtesy a little bit of nbc
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making him a celebrity, second of all, just his personality. and he's got really good numbers now, but just like you said earlier when steve came on and started handicapping the race a year ago, there's a lot of time left in this race. i would agree if the race were today, most likely, our nominee would be donald trump, but it isn't today. so, there's a lot of life left in it. to transform over to what we're doing locally and in the states where republicans are dominating public policy, republicans are winning the governors' mansions. that's because your republican parties there, these aren't national races. their state races, they're controllable, they're understandab understandable. you're not dealing with the national press. you're not dealing with big personas of people. so there is a dysfunction and a disconnect between the national party and your local parties and your local operations. >> so, i appreciate that you blamed my parent company for donald trump. that's -- i'm down for that. but, listen, part of what is interesting to me is that you're saying, look, we learned from these earlier races. we learned from '08. we learned from 2012.
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we watched how president obama won. so let me ask this, are you watching fast enough with what is now happening with donald trump, are these other more establishment candidates gonna be capable of shifting? because what i see in them attacking one another is what looks like what they had expected to do at this moment, rather than being responsive to what's actually happening in this campaign. >> you know, and i wasn't just nbc. i'm going to give out all on fox for the first debate, melissa. because when i did a debate in 2008, you had to have a state number, and you could run state campaigns. that's what caught everybody by surprise, by the way. what caught them by surprise was last night donald trump got an hour on msnbc, an hour on cnn, and an hour on fox. you just can't compete with that. and so at the end of the day, the race has changed, the rules have changed, the democrat party just doesn't have a race. bernie sanders has got the angry liberal side locked down and done, hillary's the nominee. you know, soon to be
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30-something primaries by the end of april and these races are going to start gelling and be over. but with donald trump, you know, what i would tell you is that he's got shelf life like i never would have guessed. and the establishment republicans so-call it, or everybody but sort of donald, i hadn't heard ben carson's name in two weeks. so that's how quick this can fade. i think the interesting part is, all the news this week has been donald trump's getting all the air, and the republicans below him are all sniping and griping. that's not going to last long. so maybe endorsements, i think, melissa, will really start mattering. i know they will in south carolina. if donald trump wins south carolina, i predict he's well on his way to winning the nomination. and these endorsements of trey gowdy endorsement today, yesterday, of rubio, what nikki haley is going to do, tim scott is going to do, go on down the line to the other states in texas, but this -- one thing
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that you and i have talked about before is this is going to be a very fast cycle. 31 primaries will be under the belt or caucuses. 24 of them are primaries. 7 are caucuses. by april fools day. >> look, i'm going to tell you this, cayden dawson, you can blame the media for his rise, i'll give you that, but if he wins south carolina, i'm blaming you. former chairman of the south carolina republican party, thank you for your time tonight. and there's more ahead so stay with us. want bladder leak underwear that moves like you do? try always discreet underwear and move, groove, wiggle, giggle, swerve, curve. lift, shift, ride, glide, hit your stride. only always discreet underwear has soft dual leak guard
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to learn more. >> i'm alex trebek and the announcement you just heard is for a popular and affordable life insurance plan with a rate lock guarantee. that means your rate is locked in for life and can never increase. did you get your free information kit in the mail? if not, please call this toll-free number now. in the last month alone, thousands have called about this plan with the rate lock guarantee through the colonial penn program, and here's why. this plan is affordable, with coverage options for just $9.95 a month. that's less than 35 cents a day. your rate is locked in and can never go up, and your acceptance is guaranteed. you cannot be turned down because of your health. see how much coverage you can get for just $9.95 a month. call now for your free information kit. don't wait, call today.
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♪ >> you can't use hair spray, because hair spray is going to affect the ozone. i'm trying to figure out -- okay, i'm in my room in new york city and i want to put a little spray, so that i can -- all right? right? but i hear they don't want me to use hair spray, they want me to use the pump, because the other one -- which i really like better than going, bing, bing,
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bing. and then it comes out in big globs and it's stuck in your hair, and you're like, oh, my god, i got to take a shower again, my hair's all screwed up. i want to use hair spray. caring for someone with alzheimer's means i am a lot of things. i am his sunshine. i am his advocate. so i asked about adding once-daily namenda xr to his current treatment for moderate to severe alzheimer's. it works differently. when added to another alzheimer's treatment, it may improve overall function and cognition.
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and may slow the worsening of symptoms for a while. vo: namenda xr doesn't change how the disease progresses. it shouldn't be taken by anyone allergic to memantine, or who's had a bad reaction to namenda xr or its ingredients. before starting treatment, tell their doctor if they have, or ever had, a seizure disorder, difficulty passing urine, liver, kidney or bladder problems, and about medications they're taking. certain medications, changes in diet, or medical conditions may affect the amount of namenda xr in the body and may increase side effects. the most common side effects are headache, diarrhea, and dizziness. he's always been my everything. now i am giving back. ask their doctor about once-daily namenda xr and learn about a free trial offer at namendaxr.com. it takes a lot of work... but i really love it.s. i'm on the move all day long... and sometimes, i just don't eat the way i should. so i drink boost® to get the nutrition that i'm missing. boost complete nutritional drink has 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d to support strong bones and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle.
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all with a great taste. i don't plan on slowing down any time soon. look for savings on boost® in your sunday paper. we have an update tonight on a story that rachel's team has been following out of southern california. by now, you've probably seen these infrared time lapse images of that massive natural gas leak in porter ranch. methane has been seeping from this underground gas well since october. and not only is it making residents sick, but it has also become a significant environmental disaster, because it's leaking tons of carbon dioxide, and it's releasing about 1,200 tons of methane into the atmosphere every day. thousands of residents have been relocated, nearby schools have been forced to shut down, and the faa has banned planes from flying near the leak. for weeks now, the gas company, which maintains the well, has been doing everything they can to try to stop the leak. but the well is buried more than
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8,000 feet underground, and they have not been able to pinpoint exactly where the problem is. until now. crews have been drilling a relief well and when they reach a depth of about 3,800 feet, they discovered the target. officials from southern california gas company say they used a special technology that helped them find the leak. it's the same technology that was used in the bp oil disaster in the gulf of mexico. the technique is known as active magnetic ranging and it creates a magnetic field underground that allows workers to find their targets. the gas company says they are now closer to plugging the leak. but they still don't expect to finish the job until possibly the end of march. we'll keep you posted, so stay with us. ♪ (vo) some call it giving back. we call it share the love. during our share the love event, get a new subaru, and we'll donate $250 to those in need.
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bringing our total donations to over sixty-five million dollars. and bringing love where it's needed most. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. we're always looking for ways to speed up your car insurance search. here's the latest. problem is, we haven't figured out how to reverse it. for now, just log on to compare.com... plug in some simple info and get up to 50 free quotes. choose the lowest and hit purchase. now...if you'll excuse me, i'm late for an important function. compare.com. saving humanity from high insurance rates.
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what about the idea that the olympics are to be free of politics? >> right. that's impossible. as you know, politics are a part of athletics now. and i don't think the next 10 or 12 months will change this at all. politics is a part of everything. and athletics is no exception. >> politics is a part of everything and athletics is no exception. that was olympic runner tommie smith in september of 1967. later that year, smith would join other black athletes in voting to completely boycott the 1968 summer olympics in mexico city. they vowed to do so in protest of racial inequality here in
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america. at the time, smith told reporters why. saying, quote, on the track, you're tommie smith, the fastest man in the world, but once you're in the dressing rooms, you are nothing more than a dirty negro. ultimately, the entire american delegation did compete at the 1968 olympics, but it was not without protest. >> john carlos and tommie smith, negro runners, who won medals in the 200-meter race today were ordered by the united states olympic committee to leave mexico. earlier, they were suspended for raising black-gloved fists while "the star spangled banner" was being played at an awards ceremony. >> that picture, that picture of tommie smith and john carlos, heads bowed, with their hands raised in protest, black-gloved fists. that became one of the most enduring images in sports history. but it is far from the only example of racial politics in sports. three decades earlier, in the
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1936 berlin olympics, there was jessie owen. adolf hitler had planned to use those games as proof of aryan dominance, but instead he was forced to watch as owen took the stand four times. in the 1960s, it was mohammad ali who refused to be drafted into the vietnam war on the grounds of being a conscientious objector. >> they say actually every time i enter the ring, in a way, i'm going to the war. they say to me daily, you are a prized fighter, what's the difference? and i like to say to those critics of the press and the others that there is one hell of a lot of difference in fighting in a ring and going to war in vietnam. >> ali was later tried and convicted of draft dodging, stripped of his title. but we had these moments where sports and social protests have intertwined. in the 1990s, michael jordan was
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the preeminent athlete in the country. and when the product with his name on it seemed to be linked to crime and violence in poor communities, many called on him to address it. they asked him to weigh in on robberies, on kids robbed for their high-priced air jordan sneakers. but he wouldn't. and that is where race and politics and sports has kind of stayed for a long time. quiet. until recently. when we've seen a version of athlete activism that's reminiscent of that earlier era. in the wake of george zimmerman's acquittal and the shooting death of trayvon martin, players from the miami heat took a photo wearing hoodies, their heads bowed in mourning for the slain teen. after audio tape surfaced of nba clippers owner donald sterling making racist remarks, his team staged visible protests, wearing their gear inside out, so as not to display the team name or logo. sterling was later banned for life from the league. in the wake of the shooting death of michael brown in ferguson, missouri, players from
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the st. louis rams took to the field with their hands raised, as if in surrender. a nod to the hands-up, don't-shoot protests. chicago bulls player derrick rose was the first to wear an "i can't breathe" t-shirt in reference to the death of eric garner, the man who died after being placed in a choke hold by a new york city police officer. and this fall, dozens of football players at mizzou refused to play until the school's president stepped down. he shortly, thereafter, resigned. now, in ohio, activists are calling on lebron james, one of the nba's biggest stars to put his season on hold, to sit out until the justice department, quote, imprisonens the police officers involved in the tamir rice shooting. now, whether or not lebron should sit out is not the question i want to ask. because, when you look at the history, you get why these young activists want lebron james on their side. you can understand how they can see the power of the cameras and the profits and the position of
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the black athlete. here's the question i want us to ask. not should lebron sit out, but what does it tell us when the athlete is still considered the best ally of a movement a movement of racial justice? in a moment when young black voters were key to the election and the releks of a black president, when the department of justice has been led these years by the first two african-american attorneys general, when many big cities boast african-american league prosecutors and police chiefs and mayors, even in this moment, why is it that it still feels to so many young people that there is more power for change on the court than in the courts? [ coughing ] [ sneezing ] a cold can make you miserable. luckily, alka seltzer plus cold and cough liquid gels. rush liquid fast relief to your tough cold symptoms. fast, powerful liquid gels from alka seltzer plus
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>> i'm alex trebek. if you're age 50 to 85, i have an important message about security. write down the number on your screen, so you can call when i finish. the lock i want to talk to you about isn't the one on your door. this is a lock for your life insurance, a rate lock, that guarantees your rate can never go up at any time, for any reason. but be careful. many policies you see do not have one, but you can get a lifetime rate lock through the colonial penn program. call this number to learn more. this plan was designed with a rate lock for people on a fixed income who want affordable life insurance that's simple to get. coverage options for just $9.95 a month, less than 35 cents a day. act now and your rate will be locked in for life. it will never increase, guaranteed. this is lifelong coverage
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that can never be cancelled as long as you pay your premiums, guaranteed. and your acceptance is guaranteed, with no health questions. you cannot be turned down because of your health. call for your information kit and read about this rate lock for yourself. you'll also get a free gift with great information both are free, with no obligation, so don't miss out. call for information, then decide. read about the 30 day, 100 percent money back guarantee. don't wait, call this number now. ♪
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>> 2015 is drawing to a close. we're here not far from times square in new york. it's already starting to get to be festive out there.
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but it' important as we start the festivities at the rachel maddow show and we want to wish you a happy new year and thank you for tuning in tonight and all year, i want to remind you there is a live last word with lawrence o'donnell coming up in a moment. and that is a good thing. because although we're at the end of the year, there was a lot of news today. but i also want to point out that what you guys see at home, usually the one host, maybe sop guests at the table, that might be what you think the to have show is, but man, a tv show requires a lot of people. few people have better teams than rachel. and there are amazing folks that help to get this show on air every night. and so we take one moment in the year to tell you a bit what's happening back here. ♪
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>> thank you to all the incredible folks who helped to put this show on an thanks to all of you at home who joined us tonight, including my daughter who we like to call baby nerd. happy new year. right now it is time for "the last word" with lawrence o'donnell. hey, lawrence. >> melissa, i just tweeted a picture of you and anna during the commercial break. so she made her debut on twitter like a second before her tv debut.
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>> that's good. i'm for it. we have the criminal charge filed against bill cosby today. >> bill cosby accused of a crime. >> bill cosby is accused of aggravated indecent assault. >> he's never before been charged with a crime. >> ehe's expected back in court on january 14. bail set at $1 million. >> cosby has repeatedly denied the accusations. this isn't just a he said she said. this is a he said and there are dozens of others who also said. >> n57 women came forward to accuse bill cosby of sexual misconduct. >> why now? things are desperate now. >> jeb bush announcing he's cancelling a t i