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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  October 15, 2013 4:00am-5:00am EDT

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>> maybe he should ask larry clayman if he should bring the senate compromise the floor for a vote. thank you all. it was great. that is "all in" for this evening. "the rachel maddow show" starts right now. happy monday and good evening, rachel. >> happy monday. thanks, chris. thanks to you at home as well for joining us this hour. before the giant nuclear accident at chernobyl in ukraine in 1986, the biggest accident before chernobyl involving a commercial nuclear reactor was the one at three mile island in pennsylvania. that nuclear meltdown happened in march of 1979. >> good evening. a nuclear power plant near harrisburg, pennsylvania, the cooling system broke down this morning. some radioactive steam escaped into the air. radiation passed through the 4-foot concrete walls and was detected a mile away from the plant. >> it was shortly after 4:00 this morning at the three mile island nuclear plant when a valve in a water pump that cools
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the number two reactor blew out. the blowout triggered an automatic shutdown of the system, but before the plant was sealed, some radioactive steam escaped into the air. >> harrisburg hospital, in case it has to move out, has cut its patient load to 50% by limiting admissions to emergencies. sue's baby, joseph, was born at the hospital the day of the plant accident. she'll take the baby home tomorrow, but mrs. moses is still thinking of leaving. >> i would just as soon be a little bit further away from the activity that is going on right here. >> imagine having your baby right there in the middle of the three mile island meltdown. the meltdown at three mile island happened at 4:00 in the morning on march 28th, 1979. that was a wednesday. they evacuated pregnant women and preschool-aged kids within five miles of the plant. by two days after the accident, by friday of that week, they had extended the evacuation zone to a 20-mile radius around the plant. more than 100,000 people were evacuated around three mile
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island. by that weekend, president jimmy carter was on the scene wearing funny booties and touring the plant and trying to show that the situation was being brought under control. ultimately, the cleanup at three mile island took nearly 15 years and $1 billion, but the scariest thing about that accident right when it happened was that nobody really knew how bad it was or how bad it was going to get or what it even meant in terms of dangerousness to have a large-scale nuclear accident in this country. so, that nuclear meltdown happened, the three mile island crisis started at the very end of march 1979. what was going on in washington at the very end of march '79? march 1979 in washington, while three mile island is fixating the country, in washington they were having a huge debt ceiling fight. the president was a democrat, jimmy carter. the senate was controlled by the democrats, robert byrd was the leader in the senate. the house was controlled by democrats, too. tim o'neil was speaker of the house. but even though democrats had
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control of the white house and both houses of congress, the republicans in the house had figured out a way to attach to the debt ceiling an amendment to the united states constitution. they wanted to attach a balanced budget amendment to the constitution and make raising the debt ceiling contingent on passing that constitutional amendment. so, even though the republicans were in the minority, they had figured out how to do this, and they were convinced that this so, even though the republicans were in the minority, they had figured out how to do this, and they were convinced that this was a genius strategy and that it would not only work, it would make the democrats look terrible in the process. the top republican in the house at the time was congressman john rhodes of arizona, and he told "the new york times" when all this was happening, "i think the democrats fear a balanced budget like the devil fears holy water!" mwah! so, while three mile island melted down in pennsylvania, in washington, in congress, they fought and fought and fought and fought and fought right up until the deadline. three mile island melted down on a wednesday. the debt ceiling deadline was the following tuesday.
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congress waited until the day before the debt ceiling deadline to finally raise the debt ceiling. and no, the republicans did not get their balanced budget amendment. they got some sort of meaningless, symbolic promises in that direction, but they did ultimately raise the debt ceiling. turns out, though, they did not raise it fast enough. they got too close. the fact that they waited until the very last minute had really big consequences, and i think part of the reason that this has been sort of lost to history is that nobody was paying attention to it at the time that it happened, because there was something else to pay attention to. there was a legit nuclear meltdown, a nonmet yorkal nuclear meltdown on u.s. soil at the same time. so, this is what everybody was talking about and paying attention to at the time. but looking back at it now from this distance, we can see that what congress was doing, while the country was freaking out about that nuclear reactor in pennsylvania, ends up being sort of an important lesson, an important almost dry run in why screwing with the debt ceiling's a really bad idea. there is only a couple of examples of screwing with the
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debt ceiling in modern history. there's 2011, of course. house republicans under john boehner did force us in 2011 to get very, very close to the debt ceiling. there was no actual default in 2011. we did end up paying all of our bills, but because we got so close to the debt ceiling that year, we did get our credit rating downgraded for the first time in history. they crunched the numbers later and figured that just that, without default, having people close enough to smell default, that cost the government about $1.3 billion that it would not have otherwise had to spend. so, that's one of the two modern experiences we've had with getting close to the debt ceiling with this kind of drama. the other one was that one in 1979, and that one was actually worse, even though people don't much think about it and it's not really a high-profile thing in our modern economic history. but in 1979, in the coincident with three mile island debt disaster, we did actually
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partially default on the debt. congress acted the day before we got to the technical debt ceiling, and they thought they had taken care of it, they thought they averted the crisis. but in getting so close, in getting within a day of the deadline, they actually got too close, and treasury bonds that were due to be paid off on april 26th and on may 3rd and on may 10th, all of the bonds that came due on those days didn't get paid back on time. sorry, glitch. we got too close. system overwhelmed. software couldn't handle it. we apparently didn't know how to use those newfangled computing machines at the time, and the treasury was unable to make all of the payments it was supposed to make on all of the debt that we owe. people who held those specific treasury bonds did eventually get paid, but they got paid late. they got paid up to a week late. and those delayed payments do mean that we kind of sort of defaulted on that debt for a few days. and because of that, investors sued the united states of america, saying that the u.s. government had not paid what we said we were going to pay.
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they tried to make the government pay interest for the days when these investors should have had their money but they didn't because the u.s. was deadbeat and wasn't paying when we said we would. ultimately, that whole affair ended up hiking the interest rates. sounds boring, but it ends up being really expensive. the treasury had to pay higher interest rates on bonds that it wanted to issue thereafter, which means we've got to pay people more money for the privilege of them lending us something. interest rights got hiked by a little more than 0.5%, and it may not sound like much, but that hike in the interest rates didn't go back down when the crisis was averted. we proved ourselves to be untrustworthy, and so the hike in the interest rates stuck with us as a sort of penalty for having screwed up. and if you add up the cost of all the extra interest payments we had to make because of that screw-up, in the first decade alone after that little technical just for a second glitchy default in 1979, we spent $12 billion that we would not have otherwise had to spend
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because we did that. so, people saying they were so concerned about debt and deficits made us add $12 billion extra to the debt for no purpose, for nothing in return. you would have been better offsetting that cash on fire. at least then it could keep you warm. in this case, it was for nothing. so, today we are three days away from the debt ceiling. we are due to hit it on thursday. and aside from fukushima, there's no ongoing nuclear meltdown to distract us from this one. the white house today announced that it was asking the top democrat and the top republican from both the house and the senate to come personally to the white house to talk to president obama and vice president biden face to face, just the six of them to try to work this thing out once and for all. that was due to happen at 3:00 eastern today, but at the very last minute, that meeting was scrapped. senate democrats and republicans said that their own discussions
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were going well enough that they thought it would be worth putting off the white house meeting to see if they could get a little further on in their negotiations. as everybody waited all afternoon to see when that postponed meeting would happen at the white house, the senate republicans very late in the day announced that, actually, they wanted to sleep on it. apparently, not enough republican senators were in washington for them to convene for a meeting to discuss this stuff until tomorrow morning. so, that means that the next potential meeting, the next opportunity for an act of furtherance toward saving ourselves from economic catastrophe can come no sooner than midday tomorrow, after senate republicans meet at 11:00 a.m.? even if the senate does work something out, of course, it will then have to go through the house, where there have been even fewer signs that progress is imminent, let alone possible. markets today were relatively stable, if a bit nervous, as the markets hope, just as much as everything else, that something does get resolved. but even if congress does serve something up tomorrow, we will then be within two days of hitting the debt ceiling. when we got within one day of hitting the debt ceiling back in
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1979, we did real harm to the country. and yes, it was overshadowed only by a nuclear meltdown, but it did real lasting and expensive harm to the country. hitting the debt ceiling would be bad. getting close to the debt ceiling is bad, too. are we close enough already to start worrying about the damage? joining us now is senator sheldon whitehouse of rhode island, a member of the senate budget committee. senator whitehouse, thank you so much for being with us. >> very happy to be with you. >> growing up, my dad always told me close only counts in horseshoes and hend grenades. >> this is the hand grenade version of that. >> oh, i was going to ask, does close also count in debt ceilings? are we already in dangerous territory? >> yeah, it absolutely does. there are two consequences of a default from not raising the debt ceiling. one is if you actually don't do it, and then markets and interest rates adjust in probably unimaginably bad ways. but even when you get close, other countries, bankers, people buying treasury securities look around and think this security doesn't seem quite as secure as
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it used to. i think i'm going to have to charge a little bit more in order to come in and be a buyer. and because we pay the interest, that comes right out of the taxpayers' pocket. so, it's very irresponsible to drive too close to the debt limit and to force all those costs on the taxpayers and to create all that uncertainty in the economic world. >> what is your understanding of the status of discussions right now, both in the senate and also overall towards some sort of resolution? one theory about why the markets are not freaking out too much already is that there's faith that a last-minute deal will be worked out. is that your sense that that's true? >> well, you've heard the tone in the last day or so. harry reid and mitch mcconnell have had nothing but nice things to say about each other. there's been a constant spirit, a tone of optimism.
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and now with the meetings scheduled for both caucuses tomorrow, i think it's logical to conclude that they have an agreement that they intend to present and that we'll then be voting on it tomorrow afternoon, and that leaves speaker boehner back where he was at the very beginning, which is, it's his choice. let them vote and this is over or not. >> if the house does what it did before, the last time it was in this situation, and john boehner does not choose to bring up a measure that can pass for a vote, are you of the belief that president obama could act unilaterally in some way, that there is any other option? obviously, the white house and the president himself have been very clear that they don't want to do that. they think it might cause more problems than it might solve. what do you think about that as a constitutional matter? >> it's a -- whether or not there's a article 2 or a 14th
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amendment constitutional option that the president has, even if there is one, just set that question aside for the sake of argument. even if there is one, him going to it sends that same signal to the markets and to the rest of the world that something really weird is going on in america, that this particular issue of american debt has a cloud over it, has a question mark around it, and that could have a very, very bad effect on markets and interest rates, and that, in turn, comes home to hit americans in their pocketbooks. >> every time i have heard you talk about this issue, and whatever i have talked to you about other issues, you have always seemed to me like a very pragmatic and grounded kind of senator. that's part of the reason i wanted to talk to you about this. because of that and because you're on the budget committee, i have to ask you what it is like to try to negotiate and talk to your colleagues across the aisle about this when so many, seems like increasing numbers of republicans, even in the senate, even senators who you think would be the
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experience to know better, are just saying this wouldn't be a big deal, wouldn't be catastrophic to hit the debt ceiling. they deny that it could really harm the country. how does that affect your work? >> you just kind of have to take your breath in and say, my god, did he really just say that? what is he thinking? if you were to -- i mean, the prevailing theory is, okay, so, we don't allow the debt limit to go up, but there's still some money coming in and we can still pay off the chinese with that and everything's going to be fine. well, sure, except the fact that you have to sell treasuries out into a market, and the market is now looking around at a country that is maybe not sending out checks on time to social security recipients, maybe has gone into a much deeper government shutdown because there is no liquidity at all. i mean, the consequences, even if you're still paying the chinese, are terrible. investors aren't idiots. they can look across the table and see what else is happening. it's not just going to be the checks going to them.
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so, it's like climate denial. it's really hard to reconcile it with reality. >> senator sheldon whitehouse of rhode island, thank you very much for being with us tonight, sir. good to have you here. >> thank you. all right, over the weekend, there was something that happened in washington that on the one hand was kind of like, oh, i remember this, good old days! on the other hand, it with wa like, oh, i remember this, i thought we were past this now. it all came rushing back in a flood of stars and bars. that story's next. [ male announcer ] if you can clear a crowd but not your nasal congestion, you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec-d®. powerful relief of nasal congestion and other allergy symptoms -- all in one pill. zyrtec-d®. at the pharmacy counter.
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people that traveled with their family and how do you look at them and say, how do you -- you're going to deny them access. i don't get that. >> it's difficult. >> well, it should be difficult. >> it is difficult. i'm sorry, service. >> the park service should be ashamed of themselves. >> i'm not ashamed. >> well, you should be. >> that was from the second day of the government shutdown. republican congressman randy neugebauer. when the national park service is closed, you do not get to use national park services facilities. weird, right? the monuments and parks maintained by the parks service get closed when the park service itself has to be closed. that's what the park service said it would do in the event of a shutdown before the shutdown ever happened. they posted their contingency plan online. it's a simple thing -- effective immediately upon a lapse in appropriations, the national parks service will take all necessary steps to close and secure national park facilities and grounds in order to suspend all activities except for those
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that are essential to respond to emergencies involving the safety of human life or the protection of property. it's not that complicated. if you shut down the service that operates and protects the parks and monuments, the parks and monuments shut down. ta da! this is not rocket science. but in the more fevered corners of the american political right, the parks and monuments are closed down right now not because the government is shut down but because president obama does not like those parks and monuments. this is bizarre. it's been brewing since randy neugebauer, right? it's been brewing for a while now, but this weekend, it burst forth in washington in full splendor, as the same republicans who have been leading the charge to shut down the government decided this weekend that they would lead rallies to show their outrage that the government is, in fact, shut down. >> let me ask a simple question, why is the federal government spending money to erect
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barricades to keep veterans out of this memorial? >> because the memorial is closed? because all the memorials and parks controlled by the parks service are closed because you led the charge to close the parks service. i know it was a rhetorical question, but there's actually a really direct empirical answer. conservatives who wanted to shut down the government are angry now that the government is shut down. and because of that, they held a rally yesterday in washington where, among other things, they yelled at cops. >> we want my freedom! your freedom is being walked on! you need to throw those badges off. you need to go get out of the service to the dictator of this country! >> they all know it, too. [ inaudible ] >> what are you doing?
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you're gonna stand there and let your horse [ bleep ] all over the road! >> make sure you guys clean this [ bleep ] when the horses get out of here. i don't want it on our streets. these are our streets, they're not yours. he works for us. you work for us. >> the guy at the end there saying make sure you guys clean the bleep up when you get the horses out of here, we don't want it on our streets. these are our streets. so, the police that are getting yelled at there are working without pay as the shutdown down continues, and working without pay now includes getting screamed at while at work. so, the protesters rally with the two republican senators who led the way for the shutdown. mike lee and ted cruz, xraesion expressing their outrage that the things they want open are closed now because of that shutdown. they then picked up the barricades that were around the closed world war ii memorial and dragged the barricades over to the white house and hurled the barricades at the white house, hurled them down in front of the white house fence. then the protesters went home,
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so the police, who through no fault of their own are working without being paid, the police had to pick up those barriers, drag them back to where they came from and keep working their shifts without being paid because of the shutdown that these folks made happen. they got speeches from ted cruz and from freshman senator mike lee from utah, the two most aggressive proponents of the shutdown. they also heard from congressman kerry bentivolio of all people who you may remember as the personal fringe candidate who sort of accidentally won that seat in michigan as a republican after congressman thaddeus mccotter got caught forging all the signatures on his re-election petition, and he was the only republican left on the republican line. kerry bentivolio plays santa claus at christmastime, he herds reindeer and did bit parts as an actor about a 9/11 truther movie about how really it was george w. bush who blew up the world trade center on 9/11. so, also, sarah palin, sarah palin is back.
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she has a book coming out soon about, i think the war on christmas? so, maybe that's why she's back. but she's back. and it was not a big list of speakers this weekend. it was just those four and then this guy, who told the appreciative, applauding audience that president obama needs to put down the koran and come out with his his hands pup he was trying to say, i think, come out with your hands up. and instead, he said, come up with your hands out. but i think you could tell what he meant. >> we are now ruled, quote/unquote, by a president -- >> imperialistic president! >> -- who bows down to allah. i call upon all of you to wage a second american nonviolent revolution, to use civil disobedience and to demand that this president leave town to get out. [ cheers and applause ] to put the koran down, get up on
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his knees and figuratively come up with his hands out. >> vaguely threatening but incoherent is a patented thing with these folks. it's never held them back, like say this guy, who brought the confederate flag to the rally to wave it in front of the white house. yes, an african-american family lives in that house now. beyond the menace of the confederate flag, "life & style weekly" the awkwardness and thematic incoherence of waving the giant confederate flag alongside the other flag he was holding, which was the marine corps flag. that is a particularly awkward choice, to be holding the confederate flag and marine corps flag at the same time, since the u.s. marine corps was part of the fight against the confederacy in the civil war. but hey, i think the idea here was more about waving a confederate flag in front of a house where a black family lives than it was about anything specific related to the marines. this weekend, at the railing
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against the shutdown that they demanded rally, it felt less like anything specific to our politics right this second and more like old times, kind of. the crowds may be smaller now, and yeah, everybody wonders now what sarah palin is doing there. it's no longer self-evident. but with the obama is a muslim stuff and the totally unveiled racial stuff, it kind of feels like the tea party heyday all over again, doesn't it? who's ready for another round? that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, they pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call today to request a free decision guide to help you better understand what medicare is all about
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tonight, an inside look at the bush white house. our exclusive interview with vice president richard bruce cheney. i'm senator al simpson sitting in for chris matthews. let's play "hardball"! >> that really did happen. obviously, the "hardball" theme music has improved immensely since 2001, but wait until you see this gem, this little moment from later on in that show. this is back in 2001. that interview with newly inaugurated vice president dick cheney and "hardball" guest host alan simpson. >> we were talking about tip o'neill. >> right. >> finish your remarks. this is a short segment. >> tip was one of those men, he respected everybody in the house, regardless of party. you didn't get judged as being a lesser person in the house because you were a republican,
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and of course, that's where i first met chris matthews. and as a matter of fact, did battle with chris on a couple of occasions when he was the press secretary and aide to the speaker. but the speaker always had great respect and friendship with jerry ford, for example, from their days together in the house. i must say, i like chris much better as the anchor on "hardball." >> do you watch this show? >> i do watch the show very carefully. all of us who are political junkies and involved in the bids, "hardball's" an important part of our routine. >> march 2001. former senator, finish your remarks, this is a short segment. alan simpson filling in for the great chris matthews on "hardball," a show that dick cheney says he never missed. hold that thought. there's more coming up. [ female announcer ] we take away your stuffy nose.
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republican freshman senator ted cruz of texas has a new favorite way to close out his speeches. listen to this. this is how ted cruz, mr. shutdown, right, this is how he closed out his speech at the values voter summit this weekend. >> as ronald reagan famously observed, freedom is not passed down in the bloodstream from one generation to the next.
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every generation has to rise up and defend it, or one day, we will find ourselves answering questions from our children and our children's children, what was it like when america was free? none of us will ever have to answer that question, because together, the american people, we are going to restore that shining city on a hill that is the united states of america! >> ted cruz, quoting ronald reagan, misquoting john winthrop, who never said that the city on the hill was shining. in 1630, john winthrop said forewe must consider that we should be a city upon a hill, not a shining city, just a city. reagan misquoted winthrop to make the city shiny and it stuck for some reason and that's why everybody thinks it's a quote. anyway, the other thing that ronald reagan said that ted cruz repeats in his speeches now is
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actually quoting ronald reagan from the early '60s, from before he was elected to any office. when he was just an actor and a conservative activist. and he worked as a kind of spokesmodel with the american medical association in a public campaign against a terrible new soviet-style communist takeover of the american health care system. actor ronald reagan in the early '60s warned about how this socialistic health scheme would destroy this nation and grind our freedoms under its totalitarian bootheel. >> this program, i promise you, will pass just as surely as the sun will come up tomorrow. and behind it will come other federal programs that will invade every area of freedom as we have known it in this country until, one day, as norman thomas said, we will awake to find that we have socialism. and if you don't do this, and if i don't do it, one of these days, you and i are going to spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it once was like
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in america when men were free. >> ronald reagan warned us. he warned the country that freedom itself would cease to exist if america passed that terrible health care program, and that terrible health care program made us into a soviet socialist republic where men were no longer free, that program, of course, was medicare. turns out, america and freedom did survive medicare. and ronald reagan came around to it enough that by the time he was president, he actually chose to expand medicare, about which freshman senator ted cruz is not at all embarrassed, as he now quotes that specific line from ronald reagan to raise the alarm over another federal health program that is much less of a leap into the gaping soviet maw than medicare ever was. my beloved colleague and pal, chris matthews, has just published the best-timed book ever about the real legacy of ronald reagan's approach to governance, specifically his contentious but civil working relationship with the legendary
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democratic speaker of the house tip o'neill. joining us for an interview with the host of msnbc's "hardball," author of the new book "tip and the gipper: when politics worked," mr. chris matthews. good to have you here tonight. congratulations on the success of this week. >> thank you. thanks, rache. >> when you hear ted cruz quoting ronald reagan, alluding to the quote about medicare without saying that's what it's about, reagan raised the debt ceiling 18 times as president. what is it about the real history that is so dangerous to them that they have to invent revisionist stuff instead? >> fortunately, i kept a journal, president reagan kept a diary and there are records of what was the case. ronald reagan in his mind when he went to bed at night or thought about things was ronald reagan the commentator, but ronald reagan, the governor, ronald reagan the president was a very different kind of a fish. ronald reagan realized when he cut taxes too much that he won, he came back a year later and had the biggest tax increase in history. that doesn't get into the ted
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cruz record book. he realized that social security was a very popular program, and after trying to mess with it in '81 and '82, he came back in '83 with a very progressive fix for social security that's lasted all the generations since. so, there was the ronald reagan in that record that he put out, that 78 rpm record in the 1960s, but he got back down to reality, and thanks to nancy reagan, his wife who i spent time with this weekend, and very much thanks to jim baker, he was a pracht capital conservative, like the british conservatives accepted national health after they got back into power with churchill in his second premiership. they didn't go back in time. they realized the public -- in fact, the best quote on this was george f. will, who said "americans are conservative, they want to conserve the new deal," and that's just a fact. we are that way. and it is not communism, it is not dictatorship, it is very mild social democracy. and to say that there's something wrong with that is to say all of europe, australia, new zealand, the entire modern world is somehow captive to a
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system they don't believe in. americans like medicare. they like the prescription drug program of george w. bush and they're going to like this, over time. >> chris, in terms of reagan's legacy, i think that -- i feel like, i look back at his policy, particularly looking at him around issues of war and peace and the scope of presidential powers and things around national security, and i feel like he was a pretty radical guy. but what you're documenting here is a sort of tactical consideration, a sort of tactical civility, a willingness to not tear down the government when you need to get done what you wanted to get done, when you needed it to enact your program. is that what's missing, a basic expectation about process? >> well, yeah, because with you know how he learned and developed. when he met gorbachev after tip had met him and said reagan wanted to meet you at a delegation and vouched for reagan, saying he really is sincere about reducing or eliminating nuclear weapons, who would you expect to do this? it was reagan who had warned against the soviets, said you can't negotiate with them,
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they're dishonest, who went in there in his presidency and really made his place in history. as we all know -- why do people ignore this? he was not some crazy neocon hawk who kept invading countries. he signed the peace treat with gorbachev the minute he knew it could be done. he wanted to end the damn thing. he hated mutual destruction, hated nuclear weapons and it's all in the record if anybody wants to see it. again, there is a difference between reagan when he had responsibility and when he was just out there hawking columns and radio commentaries, a big difference. >> how do we end up with a conservative movement now that has fully embraced the guy on that '78 rpm record, fully embraced the ideologue but not the governor? >> because we all embrace the winner. look at the various variations of christianity, just to take a much larger notion. there's 1,000 different versions of what christianity stands for. does it stand for constantine and war enhoc signo vinces or for peace and love?
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people find different ways to use an iconic person like reagan. >> are you, in writing about his relationship with o'neill, trying to talk about -- so, reagan has been rayified, right? made into a saint. >> not by me. >> but for conservatives, he has. so, are you trying to elevate into their understanding of him the part of him that saw democrats as humans and saw compromise as the way you get things done? >> look, in a country that's probably in our lifetimes, and maybe even your lifetime you'll live longer, perhaps. i think you will. we're going to have a divided government. it's what we have. the country's always going to be like the french, somewhere in the middle. like the french people are, they never go hard left or hard right. we're always going to have a mix of democrat and republican, probably. one party will control maybe the presidency and one house the other and the other house. they've got to learn how to work together. there has to be compromise. the only alternative is what, a military coup? there is no alternative! or absolute dysfunction. what i fear now, and it is something of a coincidence the book came out just now, is the
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thing is, tommy o'neill, tip's oldest son said, what those two guys agreed on was total dysfunction and stalemate was a disaster. the american people have to know, when they go and vote, it's going to have a consequence. if they vote for reagan, they're going to get some of reagan, maybe all of him for a while, then the people will see the limits of that. if they vote for obama, they'll get health care. they have to believe that. that's what's going now, respect for the voter. obama was re-elected, he was elected, he got his bill through the supreme court. he did everything right and they went right back and tried to pull it back from him. and i think they'll learn a lesson, you can't do that. and this president, i hope, learns a lesson -- fear is better than love. he has got to learn, that's one thing reagan could teach him, scare the other guy so he won't come at you. >> chris, when i look at the evolution of the two parties over the last 30 to 40 years, i feel like the democratic party had some choices to make, and essentially, in the clinton years, and it's continued with obama, they decided to be sort of a center-left party that basically defines itself as technocratic.
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the republican party, on the other hand, is still evolving in a way that i can't predict which way they're going and people are now starting to talk seriously about the idea that they may have a permanent schism with this sort of southern style libertarianism tea party thing that's going on. i feel like the democratic party has taken a much more predictable trajectory over 30 or 40 years. do you see it that way? >> i think very incremental. the democrats wanted to complete the social safety net and everyone knew going back to teddy roosevelt, not just fdr, that it was health care for all ages. they're doing it. as you know, in a modified way, no public option, just trying to do it so everybody roughly gets coverage so we can establish the principle that people who work for a living don't end up in the e.r. that's a very simple principle i think the public does accept or will accept it completely. the republican party has really
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gone off the other end. i think you're seeing in these people a tad, a very bad tad of a joe mccarthy in this thing that cruz is up to, certainly a lot of newt gingrich, a lot of revolutionary anger that's unfocused, it's free floating, and a lot of it has to do with we have our first black president. and if you don't believe that, look at that confederate flag you showed tonight. what is that about? they wouldn't have shown that if a white guy was in there. there's something that bugs people about change today, demographic change we know about, and something that just riles them up against obama that's really something different than politics. i think it's hatred. i don't think it's politics. >> chris matthews, host of msnbc's "hardball," author of the great new book "tip and the gipper: when politics worked,"
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>> so the threat of economic apocalypse has a way of forcing everything else in the news off of the front pages. new jersey's special u.s. senate election is this week. it's not being held on a tuesday apparently because the new jersey governor did not want to have his own reelection race on the same ballot as corey booker's race. he hand picked this week as the day that corey booker is allowed
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to have his senate race. weird, i snow. for taking a previous allegation that corey booker is secretly gay and added a bunch of x-rated descriptors. also for the record, corey is not gay. >> this afternoon we got word that the alleged libyan terrorist has arrived in the united states and is expected to be arraigned in new york city tomorrow.
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he has been under indictment for decades. since last weekend when u.s. forces went to libya and grabbed him off of the street. and without being red his rights. that means that anything he told those during that time period is not going to be admissible. >> the organization for the prohibition of chemical weapons is the they won the peace prize on friday. the former head of the agency who the u.s. forced out of the
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job in 2002 is fine finally pubically explaning now why he got fired. he said his agency was planning to do inspections in iraq. presumably inspections would have shown that and that would have been very inconvene yept for the bush administration because of the argument for all the chemical weapons. no inspections means nobody to disprove the allegations. and based on those allegations, we invaded iraq. [ male announcer ] if you can clear a crowd but not your nasal congestion,
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>> working in the news business, the best thing about coming to work on mondays is that you get to dig up the stuff that buried in a news dump. when it comes to governor ult tra sound it sounded like a greater than usual proportion and say whether or not he is going be indicted. specifically on fridays after 9:00 p.m. eastern. well this past friday night it was news in the washington post about what governor bob mcdonald is said to have alleged to offer in exchange for gifts and cash. e-mails obtained show that researchers at the man's company believe that their ceo's friendship meant that they were
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going to get state funding for its research. whether or not the governor did arrange for state funding is irrelevant. if you tell somebody give me a bribe and i'll hook you up and then you don't hook them up, you're still guilty of taking the bribe. you're just a liar as well as being a crook. something went down between them that made the ceo's company believe that the governor was going to hook them up with funding. the governor would like to sponsor these trials to research and entrepreneurship. the company flew that same scientist in the company's private plane to a weekend
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seminar on an island resort. also on the private plane, also going to the seminar, this is really interesting. the chief of staff to bob mcdonald's wife. then the following month that same state employee, she was there scheduling governor mcdonald to host a laumplg party for the company's magic tobacco pill. so the washington post asked the mcdonald administration about the first lady's chief of staff and what she's doing jetting off to this island resort with the head of this company who has been giving all of these gifts. was this virginia state business? what was she doing there? here is how the governor's office replied. whatever the chief of staff may have said or done on that event,
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that was in her personal capacity. they suggested that maybe the chief of staff may have been trying to get a job but she was definitely not there working for the governor or his wife, which is who she worked for. they now have accept ral legal teams blaming the staff seems unlikely at this point. nor does it matter that state money didn't pan out. if prosecutors find that there was a quid pro quo, then the failure to deliver the gifts will be no defense. the republican in the race has not led in the race for nearly three months. belatedly paid back the gifts from the same guy who gifted bob mcdonald. i recommend that they look

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