or friday that she will make a decision on this bill. the crowd here will only grow throughout the week. on wednesday they are planning an overnight vigil or presence here at the state capitol. and they promise to be here every single day until she decides. erin? thank you very much, miguel. obviously it will be a crucial week there. there are a lot of other states looking at the same kind of legislation. outfront tonight, a lawyer for the organization that has testified in favor of the bill for the arizona state legislature and mel robins, a defense attorney, radio talk show host. good to have you both. doug, let me start with you, you were talking about this on friday, why you believe this bill makes sense but obviously the key supporters are holding tonight, three state senators who backed the bill, supported it are now saying they made a mistake. do you think it could be a mistake? not at all. what s at stake here is whether arizona will be a safe place for people of faith. thi
freedoms, this is a human dignity bill, a human rights bill, so people of faith have a safe place in arizona. that s all it is. human rights, human dignity, mel, is that what this bill is about? i try not to laugh. the words you re using, persecution, safe, anti-discrimination, it s a joke. first of all, the bill the bill that we re discussing right now is not the bill that was in place since 1999 because your language expands it to individuals. it expands it to no, it does not. in narrows it. no, it expands it. here s the thing, i can make this very, very simple. when you re talking about the right to discriminate, which is what this bill is basically all about, the right for somebody to discriminate based on their religious belief, there are three types of discrimination that you need to understand. the first one is personal discrimination, which is constitutionally protected, by the way. i personally have the right to discriminate in my choices around my personal life. i
people of faith have a safe place in arizona. that s all it is. human rights, human dignity, mel, is that what this bill is about? i try not to laugh. the words you re using, persecution, safe, anti-discrimination, it s a joke. first of all, the bill the bill that we re discussing right now is not the bill that was in place since 1999 because your language expands it to individuals. it expands it to no, it does not. it expands it. here s the thing, i can make this very, very simple. when you re talking about the right to discriminate, which is what this bill is basically all about, the right for somebody to discriminate based on their religious belief, there are three types of discrimination that you need to understand. the first one is personal discrimination, which is constitutionally protected, by the way. i personally have the right to discriminate in my choices around my personal life. i can discriminate against
2009. it jumped to 11, don, in 2010. interesting. mel robins, thank you. appreciate your expertise on this. tonight a nasty illness has struck again aboard a cruise ship. more than 600 passengers and crew on a royal carribean s explorer of the seas are stuck in their beds dealing with vomiting and diarrhea. the centers for disease control now on board that ship, trying to identify the source of the outbreak. cruise officials are now cutting the trip short. they are expected back in new jersey on wednesday. one of the passengers, the mayor of easton, pennsylvania, sal panto jr. joins me now by phone. mayor, most of the people who are sick. are they quarantined in their rooms? have you talked to anyone who has been infected, mayor? yes, i ve talked to people, and they were quarantined for at least 24 hours. if they went down to the infirmary. i think the bigger problem is those people who felt ill and went back to their state room and never really reported it. i do know one perso
yeah. there s one other thing, don, that i think you ll find interesting. the year that the rape allegedly took place was 2010, and some of you may remember that there was a star player on university of missouri s team named derrick washington who was charged with raining somebody in 2010, and he was convicted and sentenced in 2011, and so university of missouri is also, as far as i m concerned, has an issue where they should be investigating this because the number of forcible sexual incidents was reported as two in 2009. it jumped to 11, don, in 2010. interesting. mel robins, thank you. appreciate your expertise on this. still to come, hillary clinton talks about what s next for her. plus, she reveals her biggest regret. also ahead, justin bieber hangs out in panama, but he is not alone on that beach. did husher fly in for an intervention?