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connell: have happened to you. dagen: lovely people, lovely flight attendants on american airlines. love the people. connell: i am glad you don't focus only on the negative. stocks of two which is positive as we have mixed economic news which we will talk about with bob schiller, alan greenspan, peter barnes, nicole petallides starts us off from the floor of the stock exchange. nicole: you see the dow jones industrials up 20 points. we haven't broken through yesterday's highs. we had an incredible run, weeks of gains, an incredible year. the dow was up 23%, the s&p up 27% and the nasdaq up 30%. the run continues and some names on the dow better hitting highs said disney, american express, a traveler to name a few. take a look at tiffany, all-time highs for tiffany, a higher quarterly profit in asia, that is where way saw the strength for sales and raise full-year earnings per share numbers looking good peer up 7%. dagen: to the storm that could wreak havoc on holiday travelers across much of the nation, carrying a mix of rain, ice and snow depending on where you live you'll get one of the three. we will hear from maria molina who says it is picking up steam as it heads northeast raising concerns for many. of the forty-three million travelers who will be heading out over the thanksgiving holiday. airlines like usairways and adults are thinking of waiting change fees and that is where we bring in mike boyd, the head of boyd group international who watches the airline business for a living. how bad is the storm going to beat for the airline industry for people who are flying? >> people flying, it is a one of vacation for many of them and one day. if you miss thanksgiving you can't redo it next week. the airline will not be as bad as you might think, it will be like any other storm. there are fewer people flying over this period then there would be otherwise because saturday and friday are light days. it won't help airlines' but it won't be like having black friday close the local malls. dagen: not like the skies are not like as you point this out, the skies are not like the jersey turnpike where all of a sudden there are that many more cars, there are not many more planes, fewer flights scheduled over this thanksgiving than last year. >> 1/2% fewer, the same number as feet. it will be the same as we saw but somehow or other the good lord always gives us a snowstorm over a holiday. dagen: absolutely. the problem if you are traveling is amateurs travels that time of year, people who don't do this as part of their jobs so the headaches the traveler feels is assuming your flight isn't even canceled, right when you go through security at the airport. >> it is really tough. there are people who don't fly a lot. when you have these downturns in the weather, not a lot of people are left to help you. you are dealing with a kiosk. when things go down you can't talk to a kiosk, you go to a phone and you are talking to someone who barely speaks english. can be a lot of fun when you have a white and three kids and a diaper bag. dagen: what is the best way to handle a change like that if you are in the airport and your flight is delayed or has been cancelled? are you better off using your smart phone and going on line to do it or trying to call somebody or trying to get into one of the airline lounges with a credit card? they can make changes. that is where you will find people. >> most people don't belong to those and that is the problem. the big thing is dell online and do-it-yourself. we have read book you for next wednesday so you got to go on line and do-it-yourself. dagen: with waiving of the change fees that has no financial impact on the airlines because you are essentials repeat the who are changing their flights wouldn't be changing their flights if not for bad weather so that is revenue they wouldn't see any way. >> i have a problem with airlines. you can change with in this period of time. it is a holiday. if i missed holiday let me refund the tickets and most airlines in not refund the ticket with, service fee. it is big of them to do this but the reality is you are still going to get financially it. dagen: one last thing. if you think you are going to get delayed or canceled and you are flying tonight or tomorrow and it looks like you are going to have problems should people just not go and tell the family sorry, i will see you over christmas? >> that would be my recommendation. i can't think of anything more ghastly than being stuck in chicago o'hare during a snowstorm. staying home you are safe, other thanksgivings coming that is what i would recommend. dagen: taking a shower in the bathroom. you know what i am saying? thank mike boyd. connell: now to talk about the economic data that came out today. yesterday the headline was pending home sales hitting a ten michelob but today case schiller, that they are from september reveals home prices jumped over 13% from september of 2012, fastest been since february of 2006. robert schuller's co author of that indictment, recent member of the nobel prize in economic science. nice to have that nobel prize attach to your introduction as it will be forever. that is a good start. it is great. let me go first of all to this data today and ask the question this way. prices are up. are they? any concerns they may be rising too quickly? a discussion on markets now about home price affordability. any chance these gains as they are coming drive buyers away at some point? >> home buyers in most places are relatively low. affordability is still ok. my concern about the persistence of these upswings is concerned we are more investor oriented market. i don't know that the momentum that used to be so stable or will continue to be stable could break. connell: what would that look like? this money that is coming in, not all of it but a lot of foreign money investing as opposed to buying homes to live in, a problem that could get extremely lovely, what do you mean? >> they could go down. connell: nobel prize to get that right. don't know what that looks like. >> we are in uncharted carrots sorry. we never had this kind of bubble that we went through. now we have a new emerging investor class. i don't know if i am convinced this is going to work or is that good a thing. is an experiment they are in now. they could be out in another gear. connell: we were talking about the past, present or future. we had a big bubble in housing. is there concern there's something else going on here? marbles are being formed? is that what you are saying? >> it looks like it in some cities. las vegas, it is up 30% in the last year. even more, 40% as you go back to the bottom in the spring of 2012. that is bubble territory. connell: a bobble in las vegas real-estate. >> the problem is the prices are not high yet in las vegas so it is not a plastic bubble. and i don't know how to predict it. when you say you are rephrasing what i said to be a bubble in las vegas, i wasn't really going to use that word. i think it is a funny price increase, hard to know where is going next. connell: any cities that concern you other than vegas when you see the price increases? >> san francisco for example. in san francisco, condo prices are to their peak. they are almost there. in the next month or two they pass it, the peak was in 2006, a long time ago. in real terms they are not so high. connell: you will never guess who the next guest on the show coming up after you. do you know who it is? alan greenspan. somebody had a book. listen up 51 to keep your ear piece in. bob schiller, thank you very much. >> my pleasure. dagen: nobel prize winner. i love bob. former federal reserve chief alan greenspan says very little of the central bank's bond purchasing program filtered out into the economy. connell: peter barnes joins us with his big interview with former fed chairman, exclusive interview, take it away. peter: first on fox business, he is pitching, trying to sell his new book the map and territory, lessons learned from the financial crisis and the future of forecasting. got into the current monetary policy. had to ask about that. how does the fed get out of this quantitative easing, the $3 trillion in bonds purchased over the last five years to help the economy, help interest rates, here is what he said. >> people at the federal reserve are fully aware of the issue of taxing and problems are resolved. the one thing that is important to recognize, however, is that very little of any of the q es have actually filtered out into the economy with the exception of the very heavy purchases of mortgage-backed securities, long-term interest rates down because remember what happens when of a federal reserve expands its balance sheet to create reserves in the hands of one or more commercial banks. so that we had this huge increase in so-called excess reserves which are deposits for example by jpmorgan that the federal reserve bank of new york and all other commercial banks, depository institutions among the 12 reserve banks, the issue is that these reserves are held with no capital requirements to getting 25 basis points interest. 1/4%. all they need to do is punch a few electronic buttons which transfer the funds from the federal reserve to their balance sheet. >> but that gets complicated. in an interview we talked about how this works and he said he didn't want to discuss current fed policy because former chairs is not to talk about the current chairs and folks like janet yellen coming in and ben bernanke leaving but i asked about bubbles, irrational exuberance in the stock market. he said actually he thinks it will be overstating the case to say there is a bubble in the stock market based on his analytics but i asked whether we have a bubble in the bond market. he said he does not have in his portfolio any 30-year bonds. he thinks interest rates are going up as the fed tries to manage this. connell: interesting. a lot more throughout the day from peter barnes. >> the whole thing will be on foxbusiness.com. connell: thanks, peter barnes with alan greenspan. dagen: why a 30-year bond if you are not going to live that long? connell: is that the way we're going to go with this after that interview? dagen: unless you think there are price appreciation involved. connell: don't be so morbid. dagen: happy times. not as advertised. like many of those black friday shopping deals, not good bargains at all. connell: the city of washington d.c. pushing ahead with a measure to raise the minimum wage. always a great economic debate aimed directly at walmart, we will get into that later in the hour. dagen: this storm making it through the eastern part of the united states, mario molina has your forecast. 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[ male announcer get the spark business card from capital one. choose 2% cash back or double miles on every purchase, every d. what's in your wallet? i need your timesheets, larry! dagen: joseph h bank confirming receipt of unsolicited acquisition proposal. that is a lot of words. just a breeze. men's warehouse making the bid for joseph a. bank. connell: nicole petallides. nicole: it is all tricky. let's look at what is going on. both of these retailers are hitting some halfs, multiyear highs,'s warehouse a 6%, joseph a. bank up 9%, and this on the news that men's warehouse has offered by joseph a. bank for $1 billion, 8.7% premium. this is three weeks after a judge if a bank tried to buy its bitter rival men's warehouse and moments ago we got confirmation that they did get this unsolicited proposal. watch all of these leads seems all the analysts on wall street think the merger is a good idea and shareholders are pretty happy today. dennis: as we talk about retailer the big deals you get on black friday, always advertise, you think you are getting a great deal, they draw you into the store but according to a new record they may not be worth after all. the wall street journal says the retailer has worked backward with their suppliers to set starting prices and the supposed markdowns, items would be sold at profit margins the retailers wanted from the beginning. the journal and its story uses an example of a red ruffle next wetter on sale for $39.99, supposed to be sold at a $60 starting price you see on the tab. it starts at $39.99, not exactly. here's a look while we are talking about retail, retail stocks today and all the ones on the screen are up. dagen: just-in-time for the holidays, forbes posting its annual list of the largest u.s. charities. topping the list, united way which collected $3.9 billlon, the organization works with 1300 affiliate's focusing on education, finance and health. salvation army grabbed the second spot, for for global health was third, feeding america, fourth and catholic charities usa rounding out the top five. connell: everyone is talking about the weather, especially as the storm moves east. she joins us with the latest on the storm that threatens holiday travel for many americans. dagen: online help exchange is easier to use than the government has cooked up so far. the most free research reports, customizable charts, powerful screening tools, and guaranteed 1-second trades. and at the center of it all is a surprisingly low price -- just $7.95. in fact, fidelity gives you lower trade commissions than schwab, td ameritrade, and etrade. i'm monica santiago of fidelity investments, and low fees and commissions are another reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. now get 200 free trades when you open an account. connell: dagen mcdowell was talking about the storm moving east impacting the nation. after what we sought western earlier in the weekend the big thing, the interruption of holiday travel plans. dagen: if you are not willing to stay at home you better listen to maria molina, are meteorologist at fox business in the weather center with more. >> you are absolutely right. many people at this point stay home, that is premature cross the northeast. if you are not leaving any time soon i do not recommend travelling as we head into tonight or early tomorrow morning across the northeast. the center of the storm is across the southeast. we have been talking about snow fall being a concern, strong wind and heavy rain in coastal areas, but we are also seeing tornadoes possible with this storm and we have a tornado watch right now and effect across the florida panhandle including panama city and an hour or so ago we had a tornado come confirmed with debris and damage reported a cross-section of the florida panhandle so plea here. we are talking dangerous weather. tornado warning in effect, there could actually be a tornado on the ground. if you live here you need to seek shelter immediately. there could be a tornado on the ground. severe weather including damaging winds in excess of 50 m.p.h. and tornadoes possible across the carolinas, george and the states of florida. otherwise a lot of precipitation with the storm even though the centers across the southeast, we're seeing snow coming down in pennsylvania, heavy rain across george and tennessee, the timing on the worst of the storm today across parts of the southeast and overnight tonight into tomorrow, we will be seeing the winds picking up and snow and rain in the northeast so major delays expected and for thanksgiving the storm is out of here, much more behind it. connell: dangerous stuff in some parts of the country, thanks, mario molina. dagen: changing gears, let's make money with charles payne, talking to us about common mistake people make when investing. connell: we started yesterday, she was off yesterday, i love when charles goes professor pen on us. dagen: think you for sending a didn't watch the program. connell: maybe you did. so people say stock is cheap and often don't know what they're talking about. charles: that word blows me away, cheap. they based on what? the stock price. up $1, it is cheap. the justification for this is often when i ask people, look at portfolios and the reason it came up these we had an amazing year and we're getting more and more subscribers coming don doing all the mistakes they always made. i looked at a woman's portfolio, she and $18 stock and everything else under $10 and i have limited funds. connell: they get a angry at you, you get angry back. charles: i want people to do with the right way and the thing is my rule of thumb is most stocks under $10 are overvalued. most stocks over $100 are undervalued. sox going down, when they break on the downside, i never touched them. maybe three years later or four years later i am looking at 20 years later but i am telling you there are certain things that happen and it reflects a fractured company. these factors are not small fractures. they are gigantic fundamental problems but ultimately if you had $1,000, stock trading for $1,000 and you buy one share of that i would rather see someone unknown that than a thousand shares of a one dollar stock that missed the earnings report, the ceo, an accounting scandal, it is cheap, cheap. connell: price to earnings sales or whatever the value is. charles: this might be the number one mistake a lot of novices may, the notion i have limited funds, i want a cheap stock and i am loading up on and $2 stock that used to be a $30 stock. dagen: a buck or less is probably a scam. connell: at that to your list. charles: i can't argue with that. you are probably right. dagen: better hold your nose, kitty litter. connell: see you later. dagen: better way to change your health plan on line. we will show it to you coming up. connell: the debate over raising the minimum wage front and center in the nation's capital. that is ahead. dagen: it is the bottom of the hour, already fired up for this choosing a health care plan online does not have the headache created by the government. there are other options. and walmart in the middle of the minimum wage debate. this time in our nation's capital. chris christie up and running with online gambling. connell: lets go back to nicole petallides at the new york stock exchange taking a look at the big movers. nicole: i have a winner and a loser. food and technology. talking about or me hormel. people are eating at home more. tough economy, improved revenue. really benefiting from the acquisition of skippy's peer butter. nuance profit, their forecast has been weaker than expected. by the way, up 5.5%. they have the series feature on apple tried to hold onto higher pricing and fend off deals because they tried to hold onto the higher pricing. back to you. dagen: there is a new health care website in town. three men from the bay area launching a cleaner, easier version allowing customers to find health plans based on the zip codes. based on what we know so far, to liven up and running for a couple of weeks. connell: joining us from the bureau in l.a. to talk about this. >> one of the biggest complaints about the government website is all the steps you have to go through. just to be able to window shop and compare insurance plans and costs. three young engineers came up with an easy fix at least for that problem, take a look. >> there is no doubt people are frustrated. >> well president obama has been doing damage control, they brainstormed and launched a website that lets users quickly compare health insurance plans. >> we are a comment to healthcare.gov. will allow you to browse and explore your options without going the pain of signing up. >> they added a user-friendly interface, type in your zip code, family member ages, whether you smoke and wallow. >> i had gone knowing nothing about my options to know exactly what plans exist, what subsidies i can get and what the premiums are for my family. >> from there they can enroll at healthcare.gov or with insurance company. tens of thousands of people have clicked on the sign-up online tab. there is no advertising and these guys are not making money, for them it is a public service. >> nine months ago wanted to focus on health care in general and really have the biggest impact on society that i could possibly have read this is a great outlet for that. >> a couple of glitches are being worked out. some zip codes do not return any information. the glitches are being ironed out. unlike a lot of people, they give big props to the federal website, healthcare.gov and to the contractors who did all the legwork to gather the data and make it public. connell: thanks. dagen: for more perspective, editor at large for canada's national post and author of merger of the century. what do you make of the problems we are suffering here? >> i think the story is the one that gets all the noise and it should, this kind of a mess and i welcome this idea where all of these entrepreneurs come up with ideas to do it better, faster and so on. that is one story. i don't know about you, but my experience is rollout the seventh circle of hell. i've had my toyota, my tires, it is really difficult stuff. this is a big contract, a huge deal. that has to be fixed. the second story is you are making steps as a nation to match what other rich nations are doing. that is provide basic health care for everybody. connell: i think it would be fair to say the connotation with government involvement is a negative one with the way the rollout has gone and other things, so are you here to defend that? speak of the system is different. europe has a really good hybrid system with a basic public health care for everybody and you can do à la carte. think of it like public education for all, but you can go to a private school and get stuff à la cart. you still have to support the public school system. canada is totally monopolistic. cosmetic surgery is paid for, eyeglasses, dentistry. if there is something wrong with your mouth, that is covered. dagen: essentially single-payer health care, the hospitals run by the government, the doctors are reimbursed. >> the doctors negotiate fees like in the private sector and other countries. the hospitals are now all commit all and that they weren't in the beginning. there's no insurance companies involved, so the only payer for all these services are governments. the government pay for everything. they did the negotiations but the doctors run the system. dagen: one of the issues here as we have single-payer, it is called medicare. we are paying for it today. there is a hole in it. it dries up in 13 years roughly based on the trustees report. i think one of the issues people had with moving ahead with the health care system is we had one on the verge of being broken and needs fixing and we are not willing to do that now we are trying to extend something to the rest of the population. >> your health care system is the worst in the world. cost twice as much as everybody else's per person. rich people in a hurry, if he wants to get something done in a hurry or if you want to go to the mail. we have clinics that have a lot of american patients. highly ranked for certain cancer research, we have a hospital for sick children that does all kinds of things. dagen: wait times in canada have been longer. americans have some distrust of government when it comes handling their health care. >> it is tricky to provide basic health care when your system is already too expensive so that has to be something on the cost side eventually. it might happen if you get all the healthy people, young, healthy people signing up paying premiums. it will bring everybody else's costs down. connell: we generally like people with canada like rob ford. >> he put us on the map. connell: i wouldn't know abouu that. speaking of health care, might be some issues there. a good discussion. thank you a lot. we are not merging with you, you're on your own. an interesting book, all the same. interesting debate on the economics of things. minimum wage debate is back and walmart finds itself in the middle of it in washington, d.c., coming up. dagen: online gambling a reality in jersey. big money for the west state. lawmakers are hoping that will be the case. connell: more peter barnes interview with alan greenspan. peter has no comments coming your way at the top of the hour on "markets now" reedit keep it here. ♪ no t people have the same financial goals. pnc works with you to understand yours and help plan for your retirement. visit a branch or call now for your personal retirement review. yep. got all the cozies. 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[ male announcer ] get the all-new 2014 cla250 starting at just $29,900. >> i'm adam shapiro to fox business brief. consumer confidence fell to its lowest levels since april. the conference board index fell to 70.4 from 72.4 in october. consumers express concern about future job and earning prospects. home construction permits rose last month to the highest level since june 2008, the commerce department said october building permits jumped 6.2% two is easily adjusted annual rate of 1.03 million units. ford is recalling its escape small suv to repair oil and fuel leaks that can cause a fire. the cylinder heads and more than 151,000 escapes from the 2013 model year can overheat, they can crack causing oil leaks. the defect has caused 13 fires but no injuries. this is the seventh recall since the redesign escaped launched in 2012. that is the latest from the fox business network. dagen: washington, d.c., city council pushing forward a measure to increase the minimum wage in the nation's capital by over a period of time. 40%. in part aimed at walmart. again originally aimed at walmart trying to essentially keep the company out of the city limits and highlights the argument about whether there should be a national increase in the minimum wage. former director of the congressional budget office anti-american actions form. you say what? this is just a local issue for washington or do you think this is something that will be gaining steam in other parts of the country? >> i think it will be gaining steam. this is responsible and legitimate problem. you've had such a weak recovery with such poor income growth, looking for a raise one way or another. that has fueled the minimum wage. the problem as it does not effectively solve the problem and in fact causes a lot of harm. it is not just walmart. most of the minimum wage workers are in small businesses, 40% of them under 50 employees, that is where you get the big impact especially affects hiring. an economy with weak job growth to curb hiring is counterproductive move. dagen: walmart average full-time associate and hourly worker makes a little under $13 per hour according to all start the mac walmart research. >> walmart is not a minimum-wage company. it is a great misnomer to suggest it is. also offers health benefits and often has urban legends, neither of those is true. the real problem is a lot of small business with minimum-wage workers and if you raise the minimum wage, you hurt hiring in those small businesses. work with don suggest if you went to a $10 minimum-wage nationwide, you would kill 2.3 million new jobs. that is a big harm in an economy not generating enough jobs to get us down anything that looks like 5.5, 6% unemployment. it is a very counterproductive move. one more thing, dagen. one thing if you did this and you suffered the job loss and you somehow helped poor people. but 80% of minimum-wage workers are not living in poverty. they get the raise. this does not add up going through the numbers. dagen: what would you do to help the working poor? >> first we have to grow better. we have to stop the set of policies that rely on fake taxes, regulation and impede the ability of the private sector to create jobs because those jobs are going to be the heart of higher wages. the second thing get people into work. the minimum-wage gets people out of work. get people into work. that is where poverty goes down, when people are working. dagen: thank you. connell: interesting data talking about the market. alan greenspan on. with that as the backdrop, investor confidence. this tracks the appetite for risk. appetite for risk. in november showed retail investors may be driving the last leg of the 2013 gold run. talked about it today, pointing out the retail investors make some big mistakes along the way as they jump in. some different questions for the head of research and advisory, she joins us now from boston. the questions related to these institutional investors. we talked about the retail side of it. what are the institutions doing right now? >> glad to be on. the state street investor confidence index is really focus on institutional buying and selling, not opinion. the big headline we have got this month is european investment confidence after ratcheting up for several months and actually peeking out last month over mid-2007 levels has pulled back over 10 points, we are now in basically risk neutral territory. connell: that is european side of it. it'll be interesting people haven't heard it yet what greenspan had to say about whether the bubble atmosphere out there. what about here in the united states? anything that stands out? >> really last month was the tale of two regions because as we were seeing the europeans with a very high sentiment. in the u.s. we saw a big retrenchment, we went from sort of a risk neutral stance in the u.s. to something that was an index of about 85, so very low. really it is saying a lot about policy uncertainty. institutional investors in the u.s. were reacting certainly to some of the issues in washington and the budget debate. connell: which we'll talk about at nausea him. we will go through another round of that, thank goodness. >> come january. connell: this is the most part looking backward at that as opposed to being predictive of the futures, is that fair? >> it is fair to say this is how they are voting, not what they say they are doing. and so it is tracking what is really happening. in the u.s. i would say we do know investors are institutional investors are still somewhat underweight their position in u.s. equities, so although retail investors tend to get in toward the end, the data will show that. but institutions still have some reallocation to do toward the u.s. we will see whether or not that happens. connell: that is interesting. a lot of different sized to this. that is why do so tough to figure out what the market will do. thank you for joining us with these numbers, appreciate it. >> thank you. dagen: new jersey goes gambling. 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(announcer) ranked highest in investor satisfaction with self-directed services by j.d. power and associates. connell: this is tomorrow's business today as new jersey gambling raters are giving six casinos a green light to offer internet gambling. hoping to put places like atlantic city back on the map. dagen: rick leventhal with more. it is a big day for jersey. >> it is indeed. largest expansion of gambling since the casinos first opened their doors here 35 years ago today. new jersey becomes the third state america to legalize online gaming. 13 different online websites ram partnership with six atlantic city casinos offering poker, blackjack, roulette, any casino game to anybody signing up as long as that person is physically in the garden state. athere's a huge appetite for online gaming with 9 million residents of new jersey. the vastness 200 million 200 million-1.8 billion per year which has the casinos and their partners salivating. >> this is a historic moment for the poker industry. i think regulated gaming coming back into the united states is a transformative moment in history, something poker players have to looking forward to for a long time and the industry has been looking forward to for a long time. >> texa taxes going to go to the state and the redeveloped in front fund and the profits will go to the casinos and partners helping to stabilize the casinos bottom line. connell: a lot of money here. number one regulation, how will it be regulated and the societal question compulsive gambling is a big problem, so are they addressing that at all? >> they say they are. they say you are much better off gambling at one of these related online sites then you would be in a brick-and-mortar casino because in a casino you can be anonymous. you can walk in and start gambling and losing your money and all they have is a picture of you. online you have to register with all of your personal information and they keep close tabs on your betting habits and regular readers will spot in a disturbing patterns they say helping you get the help that you need. listen. >> in the internet world everything you do have a record of and we keep that record for 10 years. so you are not anonymous. if you think you are but you really aren't. >> and net gaming online in new jersey you have to be in the state to play. dagen: but you don't have to put your clothes on to gamble, pants free. connell: i apologize for her behavior as usual. thank you. he felt like he was cornered. dagen: president obama gets heckled for some of his reporters yesterday. he may real effort to reach across the aisle. for some help. dennis kneale, tracy byrnes ask for help coming up. connell: the storm moving east can ground ar your thanksgiving travel plans. a detailed ahead on "markets now." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ tires screech ] chewley's finds itself in a sticky situation today after recalling its new gum. 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[shouting] >> all right. what i would like to do -- don't worry about it. let me finish. how about -- let me finish. dennis: the his got to heard. president obama getting heckled by one of his own supporters. i am dennis kneale with tracy byrnes taking you through the next hour of markets now. failed obamacare controversial deal with iran, fractured party. should the president making a real leopard to reach out to republicans for help? alan colmes way is in. record run in the market as some fear in the stock bubble. former fed chin kicking a fox business exclusive and winter weather blasting the country, the latest forecast and how it could hamper your holiday travel plans. all this and more on markets now. >> the in-laws for thanksgiving and not enough, now you have to overcome travel troubles. tracy: you had your turkey. dennis: is on order but not cut yet. tracy: got to work on that. time for stocks as we do every 15 minutes. nicole petallides on the floor of the exchange. all little something on the dow. nicole: he appears on fox business all the time, moments ago, checking on his flight for tomorrow morning to where? >> seattle. i am on time but all bets are off. tracy: represents the many americans who are ready to take the trend but don't know if they are actually going. get your turkey and friends in seattle. markets all higher across the board and worth mentioning the nasdaq composite, new high today. dennis: thank you. one misstep after another for the obama administration, disasters rollout of obamacare and the president's democratic party is divided by controversial deal to lift sanctions on iran for a new standstill. time for the president reached out to the gop? let's bring in alan colmes. what do you think? is it time for new or reached? >> person always be our region. by the president and vice versa but this is the republican party that wants nothing to do with this president would they were renouncing the deal with iran before the details even came out saturday night. within moments of 9:00 eastern texas senator john koren said this is as absurd as obamacare. they don't want to work with him. dennis: democratic senator chuck schumer of new york. >> 9 five people in the democratic party against this. john schumer, i disagree with him, this is a good deal, six months deal that expires ended it is not a good play with in six months the deal is done. dennis: iran is coming to the negotiating table and because the sanctions hurt so bad. we are willing to lift the sanctions and allow them to stay where they are. >> it lowers in richmond to 5%. it is not staying where they are. it lowers the enrichment and again if iran does not play properly in six months the deal is done. dennis: what about the notion we shouldn't trust, all. they are liars and they hate us and >> what is the alternative? >> further sanctions. >> to lower enrichment in return for a using sanctions. dennis: back to republican overture. at some point doesn't the president get helped by trying to win over the enemy? a trust him. >> mitch mcconnell says get him out of office, you have them renouncing his deal with iran before they knew the details, they don't want to work with them. he should do not reach betty won't get a receptive response from the other side because they despise the guy. dennis: the president is losing the media, they are starting to turn against him. not like -- the media was always -- >> i talked to liberals in new york who are disaffected and wyatt -- >> always had a problem with progressives, those on the left to one single payer, did not like the affordable perfect, and the president was never in the pocket of liberals or vice versa. he is governing as a moderate, not a progressive. dennis: can't line of the the republicans how does he get out of this mess? >> republicans don't want to work with him. they want to see and not do well. they were renouncing obamacare before it got implemented. he should do our reach. when they fail to respond, the people shutdown the government because they could get what they wanted. they will not work with obama because they don't like the guy. >> i don't think the government shutdown heard as. >> it cost billions and billions of dollars. dennis: we saved -- >> crude something else the. dennis: cost money -- >> last time moody's lowered bond rating after they pulled this away. dennis: i think the markets know all doubt that government shutdown -- >> so obama get blamed if the market goes down but get no credit for going. dennis: that is the way it works. thanks a lot. tracy: i blame him for the traffic on the bridge. former federal reserve chief alan greenspan saying the markets are far from bubbly. the measurements way below normal rates. peter barnes joins us from washington with more on the exclusive interview with a former fed chief. awesome job, by the way. peter: he stopped by to talk about his new book the man and the territory. good at connecting the dots on what happened in the financial crisis, lessons learned as what he is trying to talk about in the book but i did ask him about the markets right now and as you recall in 1996, the chairman famously talked about irrational exuberance going into the dot.com bubble. price-to-earnings ratio is 20. to the depending which when used it is 16, 18, 19. are the markets bubbly now? are we getting a little bit of rationally exuberant these days in equities? here's what he said. >> remember that price-earnings ratio is only part of the evaluation process. what economists do is calculate the equity premium comment and the equity premium is a measure of what the average investor requires as a rate of return to invest in common stocks. jpmorgan his estimate is the best annual event of that particular statistic fairly recently a year or two ago had the highest equity premium in 50 years. that meant stocks were extremely undervalued. end back significantly since if you look at the equity premium it has come down. it is well off of its peak but still way beyond normal. there is still that support, but obviously, we are now no longer at the peak where it sort of is like shooting fish in a barrel. now there's a problem in the short-term forecasting, to say that the market is bubbly and the position where it could conceivably waiting to start a serious problem is overstating it. >> wanted to ask about current monetary policy, the fed's 3 don't -- $3 trillion of bond buying, quantitative easing, how is trying to exit that, manage interest-rate expectations and all he would say is it is an experiment. the thing is going to work? he says i hope it does but i will wait and see. tracy: that was pretty telling. great interview. let's look at reaction. we will bring in san sobel, chief equity strategist and fox business contributor charles payne. i felt that was pretty telling when peter asked about quantitative easing, he said was an experiment and he hopes to work, fingers crossed, over the shoulder, do whatever you do to wish us all good luck. >> actually yes because it has not been tried before. we are dealing with 0 interest rates, we need to have no alternatives in which to stimulate the economy so we had q e 3 for a while land investors seem to like it. we have a bit of euphoria in the market once they decided to delay the tapering until who knows when, standard and poor's economic would operate independently of this in the capital iq thinks they could do it in december, we could see the first capering take place sometime next month and if not then just gets delayed until the first quarter but they are going to definitely be pulling back the stimulus sometime next year. tracy: what happens to this market? it is not bubbly. >> interesting thing. there was an article yesterday about maybe the fed trying to go -- 25 basis points, going to zero completely or a negative number. this way forcing banks to loan money. tracy: low enough to force them now? charles: is not forcing them. they have a pretty good deal on their hands and alan greenspan talked about that. they put it on deposit with the fed and is is a small interest rate but they get something back and can ride this out until they get the business they want, better gdp. as far as tapering them, greenspan, nothing to go on with capering, i do know i have studied in the past when the fed made sharp changes in their policy and the last week to bull run's we sought temporary pullbacks, a lot of people in the market because of the fed, let them come out, we saw both times the rally resumes for many months. in one instance over 40 months and one was 70 months. huge moves after they began to raise rates. tracy: sometime next year. before it will be earliest march at best. tracy: what do you think? you have seen in your research the fed chair changes ten years, knew person comes in the market school back a little on that as well. >> certainly charles, there's a possibility that the fed waits until march, that is what consensus is saying, based on the data, there's not enough to convince them to start raising or capering now. historically the first three months of but new fed chairperson's tenure in office the market declined 1.5%. you take out alan greenspan the number pops back up to plus 1 person so it is an urban legend that basically says the market gets a little worried when we have a change of did leadership the market declines. actually 54% of the time, pretty much like flipping a coin. charles: alan greenspan, infamous or famous to benign your deck of view. tracy: potentially being blamed. charles: that was in 1996, december of 1996. the market was rationally exuberant for another three years. trying to pinpoint the top even when the maestro tried it is difficult to do. tracy: what do widefor the end of the year? people are going to get some year end bonuses money in the market are out? >> does back into the market or continues into the market, a look back to world war ii and said any time we had a year to date rise of 15% or more through the end of november what happens and interesting lead the market has continued to rise a little more than 2% and did so more than 70% of the time. the odds favor a continued advance through the rest of the year. tracy: like our own statistics course. thank you both. hi love that. forget about winter wonderland. more like a frozen tundra. severe weather causing a massive headache for holiday travel. dennis: let's talk about what is bugging me. rights to interfere with your personal dna testing. tell us what you think as we head to break, let's look at energy. tracy: looking at the dow 30 right now all. alisha more red than green on the screen. not a magical day. they are up top. down below, jpmorgan, cisco and intel, head down to the floor as we do every 15 minutes, joseph a. being confirming unsolicited bids for men's warehouse. nicole petallides, you're going to like the way you look. nicole: who is taking over who here? which companies going to lead the break? men's warehouse new hy, joseph a. bank new high. a winning day. where else offers to buy joseph a. bank for $55 a share, 9% premium. this is two week that the bid was dropped, silicon from this unsolicited proposal that is happening but everyone on wall street when you read analyst commentary think this energy, the combination of two companies will be a good one, 1700 stores. tracy: thanks. see you soon. dennis: what is bugging me is the fda crackdown on sheet dna testing. a naked power grab by an imperial bureaucracy. the fda is intruding on a new found of digital information about my own personal and genome which could reveal high risk cancer of heart disease and it belongs to you. the fda says you don't get to learn about unless the fda been that okay. every crackdown need the head on a stick, a target the government an attack as a warning to others. in this case the target is an outfit called 23 and the. itself and at home test called less it kit. kate cute kids, swap your in your cheek, get back report matching your sample against genetic markers for 240 trade including killers like breast cancer, $99, half a million people of done this without incident but the fda today newsbreaks ordering a halt claiming the little q tip is a medical device ever as risky as a pacemaker implanted inside your chest. during it is. the fda is ticked off that they started selling this without bowling before the fda. when accused it isn't a medical device. get out of a way of the data revolution. tweet me at dennis kneale. is the fda right to interfere with your personal dna testing? tracy: no. there's your answer. your utility bill is something that bud you, but the need too. we have one company giving you power over your provider. jack frost, looking to throw a big wrench in your thanksgiving plan. latest on the storm before you head to the airport. be prepared to shower in this income but first , here is how the world currencies are favoring against the u.s. dollar. we will be right back. we went out and asked people a simple question: how old is the oldest person you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed much is the official retirement age. ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪ yep. got all the cozies. 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[ male announcer get the spark business card from capital one. choose 2% cash back or double miles on every purchase, every d. what's in your wallet? i need your timesheets, larry! tracy::isn't taking the nation coast-to-coast already interrupting holiday travel plans. meteorologist maria molina standing by and the fox business weather center with leaders. people are worried about this. >> they should be. earlier today we were talking about for the as and confirmed tornado in the florida panhandle. is not just threatening travel but even threatening homes across parts of florida. we have a concern for severe weather in cutting damaging winds in excess of 50 miles an hour and isolated tornadoes in florida, georgia and across the carolinas. that is something else we are looking at with this storm system. otherwise close to the center of the storm located across the southeast, well in advance of the center of the storm, precipitation across upstate new york and pennsylvania, talking about some of right snow, the heaviest precipitation across the southeast means rainfall across sections of georgia, the carolinas, tennessee and the mid-atlantic. we want to focus on the center of the storm, that is where the worst conditions will be and that will be in the northeast until we head overnight tonight into tomorrow and we are going to be seeing gusts, 50 miles per hour, heavy rain, even four inches of rain out there and the snow and the interior side of the storm, parts of west virginia, ohio, western pennsylvania, upstate new york, 6 to 12 inches of snow possible in spots. a lot to track with the storm. tracy: god has amazing timing, planning these storms. thank you very much. dennis: d-day, the latest on the blanket of nasty weather threatening holiday travel plans for millions of people across the country and team coverage of the looming holiday travel nightmare. casey stiegel standing by at dallas-fort worth international airport to look at the fallout of airline ticket prices. we want to go to steve, live at reagan national airport outside washington d.c.. >> things are fairly good. we get a lot of nasty weather later. people traveling everything skipping and experienced problems all across the country as the storm swept across from california to the northeast. we look at pictures here, paranormal, washington national, some of the arrivals have been delayed and the departures later today could be delayed as well. so far today, let's look at 318 slides in the u.s. today, so far they're freaked because of the storm, 2,069 flights have been canceled. things here now but things could get a lot worse. listen. >> worst case scenario would be similar to what we saw two days ago where there was over a thousand, roughly a thousand canceled flights and delays, suggesting we have all travelers traveling this holiday season check early and often. basically see flights that are later canceled and get in contact with your travel agent or airline to accommodate you quickly. >> here's my colleague casey stiegel. >> happy thanksgiving. dallas was really in the same boat as you heard a couple days ago, 1,000 flights cancelled on sunday and then on monday but as of right now at this hour things pretty much back up and running. no real delays other and cancellations showing up on the board here but i have got to say other than all this mother nature headaches that have been created, aaa was projecting the number of people traveling for thanksgiving this year was going to be down, forty-four million had travel plans last year, now forty-three million have plans this year. analysts say on average air fares up 7%, hotels about 10%. then you mix that in with the current economic uncertainty. listen. >> there's the issue of the government shutdown legit weighed heavily on people's mind and not just the last shutdown, but about the decisions that have been deferred to january. americans are aware of that and it creates a sense of uncertainty that has negatively impacted travel plans. >> not everything went up, rental cars a bit cheaper according to aaa and the average price for a gallon of gasoline is down roughly $0.13 across the nation so if time allows it might be easier to take a road trip instead of traveling by air. dennis: thank you very much. tracy: road trip with the sled may be. or both. big storm brewing, find out how one company could seek control of 70% of the market. dennis: they take your money and now they are leaving you vulnerable, a new report says the irs is putting you in danger of getting hat? 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the editor in chief of multichannel news met with glen britain at time warner cable yesterday, joined as with the slowdown based on what you saw and heard yesterday, is he ready to sell? >> glen ridge is leading after 41 years in the cable industry, has seen everything, someone who can be described as a pioneer. he said something to me he said on the earnings call which was consolidation can be a good thing but terms matter. dennis: he has seen back consolidation. >> it was shaped by two big corporate -- in 2000. >> he looks at those as a very lopsided investors and i think he would do would deal with the price is right but the way these stocks have performed already, there has to be a hefty premium paid. dennis: even though stocks have been a. glen britain may not be in control, he leaves at the end of december and the chief operating officer is going to be ceo. would he sell these things? >> those guys are of a like mind. one of the smartest guys in the industry. i think the board is going to give rob a chance to do his best. i think rob wants to run that successfully. dennis: has been waiting to take over. a special source of yours, john malone, you wrote a biography of him several years ago. john malone is the guy to decide what happens next. >> he is a creative financial engineer and an aggressive dealmaker and someone once described rupert murdoch as the shark. if rupert murdoch's the shark than john malone is an alligator because he will sit in the mud and wage and for the right opportunity ainge time warner is having some challenges, just got out of a big fight with cbs. >> the recent quarter in the past year, something, right? >> john malone got into cable, back into cable with charter three reasons. number one, there's a lot of upside, one of the lowest cash flow per home rates, it is -- dennis: a run on time warner cable, a company three times as large. >> he hasn't made a run yet but he favors consolidation and the reason he got into this industry is a lot of upside, and banking on the genius of tom rutledge who is widely regarded one of the best operators in the industry and thirdly and importantly john malone believes in scale. the thing you got to understand the number-1 thing driving all of this right now is the cost of programming. the ball cost of wholesale programming, the growth rate is higher and retail and. dennis: the price increase >> that is correct. that is almost unsustainable. what can stop that? scale economics. dennis: for cloud to concept with those providers and keep their price lower. the big question i'm wondering is how do you see this coming down a year from now? time warner cable independent or a drink on someone else's charm bracelet? >> don't make me guess this. john malone is a patient man and if it doesn't happen now, i think he will get what he wants but there has always thin a tremendous amount of consolidation in the industry and we have seen these companies can be successful standing on their own. dennis: malone is one to bet on, one to watch. good job, thanks for being with us today. appreciate it, happy holiday to you. tracy: black friday almost upon us. wait on line at your favorite box store, those black friday deals apparently are not a figment of your imagination. a new report in the wall street journal suggesting much of those so-called marked down items that are up for sale on black friday, designed with the discount built in. according to the wall street journal retailers work with manufacturers to start setting prices, they start higher and after the markdowns actually get to the desired profit margin. a look at major retailers, fudge the numbers a little before you actually get there and you think you are having a big sale, not so much. dennis: how you feel is more important than the fact. the power is yours literally. one company putting power back in consumers's hands when it comes to the electricity bill. tracy: say cheese for the first word of the year and going 3d, a look at the ever evolve thing -- 3d story. why do we do that? take a look at your 10 or 30 year treasury. breakdown three basis points 2.7%. we will be right back. 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>> go home tonight, look at your bill and come to chooseenergy.com and give you a quick view of the choices that are available. if your current bill is $0.15 a kilowatt hour, other choices available to you, a little information to complete the process for you. it 6 ten minutes and within the next 45 days after the next meter reader will happen in the background. you don't have to do anything, there's no risk, you have to save a lot of money. tracy: no risk, and i worry, lost power a bunch of times that they won't come to my house if a tree comes down or something. i don't worry about that. >> there is no risk, just what goes into the grid. where the competition comes in and they also come to your house, god forbid a tree falls or there's an issue with your service will happen in the background and you don't notice the difference between the various suppliers as to what any goes in or what is going on in the background in the grid. tracy: you have $7.5 billion in funding, that has got to make you happy. >> it will give us a chance to fill out the spot and raise awareness in education with consumers and they are big states, new york, new jersey, connecticut, ohio, illinois, opportunities available and if there's a little education to be done for consumers so they make it comfortable, opportunities out there different than the supplies they have gone with. tracy: 7.5 million, mentally. >> i wish it were a billion. tracy: let's talk about a small business guy. how does he or she take advantage of this? >> the same thing for consumers and small-business owners. the ceo of your house or a small company a big part of monthly spend and something we don't think about all the time but has a huge opportunity to save money and put it to the bottom line so weather is your house or small business and you want to go hire more people or take a long lease vacations, there are big stained opportunities available. tracy: thank you for bringing this, you can actually go out and shot it. gary cooper ceo of choosing energy. thank you so much. dennis: what's left to the trading pits of the cme. >> everyone is talking about cold weather. a lot of people think they got a bad report on natural gas, to get that report. oil prices relatively quiet. they were lower but rallying of the support that the u.s. is challenging the chinese air defense zone over disputed japanese islands. a little geopolitical risk coming into the market ahead of holidays giving us a little bit of a bounce off of the low. a lot happening. as far as the weather, the biggest driver up right now is heating oil, heating oil inventories at five year low, that is why you're seeing yellowback to you. dennis: thank you. tracy: we can't get enough of this. the obamacare website taking more flak now over security, new report from the inspector general says the irs may be leaving taxpayer information completely vulnerable to hackers. diane macedo has the gory details. diane: the new report from the treasury inspector general for tax administration says the irs hasn't been keeping up with auditors' recommendations on protecting taxpayer information and that is raising concerns about the additional information the agency will store under the affordable care act. according to the report eight of 19 recommended fixes from previous audits hadn't been fully implemented despite the irs reporting they were complete. as a result the report says the agency failed to do things like property lock user account, update software or scan service for major vulnerabilities which makes easier to exploit user accounts and steel taxpayer identities. without eight corrective actions that were improperly closed the inspector general's investigation found the irs didn't audit any of them to ensure their implementation for the executive approval to close the man three had no documentation at all to support their closure. investigators brought in their samples by 69 planned corrective actions and found only 24 had documentation to fully support being included. inspector general j. gristle reports the right degree security diligence is not applied to systems disgruntled insiders or malicious outsiders can exploit security weaknesses and may gain unauthorized access. this is the latest irs audit to reveal lack of oversight at the agency and that is raising concerns that it may not be quick to take on the new responsibilities awarded under the affordable care act which includes taxpayers' sensitive health care information. as to the inspector general's recommendations the report says the irs agreed with most of them but may not necessarily address the previous the closed corrective actions and the implementation of some of those recommendations appear to be contingent on identifying adequate resources. i did reach out to the irs that the agency said nothing was known available for comment immediately. tracy: if you were worried about going on the site before. >> that is the thing. this has to do with taxpayer information, financial information but restoring health care information raising the level of concern. tracy: thank you very much. dennis: your tuesday media minute getting hard to tell. is run burgundian new film, chrysler pitchman or a hot new talk show guest? the right answer, yes. actor will ferrell parlayed his role in the anchormen sequel to a lucrative side business which premieres december 20th, and 70 online for chrysler's dodge during the, sales of the 59% and trashes the durango on conan last week and next the will anchor espn sports center and may parrot with robyn think of the song blurred lines and given how the is blurring the lines with nine, commerce and media that is quite appropriate. going to court, the seminole 90s white rapper banned upset about a parity of its girl video from so long ago. goldilocks to the video with liberal singing new lyrics to the same old tune. beastie boys refused to let the music be used in ads because they don't want to be used in parities either. the question is whether the courts will agree. does the fda have the right to interfere with your dna testing? your response to what is bugging me coming up. 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(vo) meee-ow, business pro. meee-ow. go national. go like a pro. ♪ ♪ no two people have the same financial goals. pnc works with you to understand yours and help plan for your retirement. visit a branch or call now for your personal retirement review. dennis: is the fda right to interfere with your d-testing? here's what you had to say? mike kelly said i am sick of the fed sticking their nose in my business. preventive medicine, get out of my medicine cabinet. and bruises 475,000 people on 23? sounds like the obamacare kids need to get on that market ride. drugs treated two years ago for type ii diabetes before the doctor decided adult onset type i. recent tests showed increased risk for type i. tracy: first gets a spot in the dictionary, and now a place in your living room. going 3d. the designer, for those on serious 113 there's a picture of her head in 3d, making waves with her take on the trend. using apps to digitally rendered her lightness and print the pieces in 3d with a somewhat striking resemblance to her actual head. you don't have to be a pro to give the gift to your friends and family this holiday season. the web site shapeify uses a microsoft connect center to scare anybody, just what everybody needs and for $59 they will send you or your loved one a 3d mini he do. they can't get enough of you. the needed in their living room too. dennis: airlines looking at waiting tinge fees to deal with the wind 3 mass watching out holiday weekend for a good part of the nation. the forecast and flight delays are next. tracy: the new social network what this has a twist, for did people. adam shapiro talks to the creator of a virtual graveyard for those who have gone before us. 21 points, don't go anywhere. ♪ [ bell ringing, applause ] five tech stocks with more than a 10%... change in after-market trading. ♪ all the tech stocks with a market cap... of at least 50 billion... are up on the day. 12 low-volume stocks... breaking into 52-week highs. six upcoming earngs plays... that recently gapped up. 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[ male announcer ] lease the 2014 glk350 for $419 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. pop in the drum of any machine... ♪ ...to wash any size load. it dissolves in any mperature, even cold. tideod pop in. and out. adam: time to brainstorm a thanksgiving plan b with. i'm adam shapiro. a big winter storm is headed east just as millions plan to visit their family for holiday. the latest on the storm's path, flight delays and if you need to alter your travel plans. neither rain, nor snow, nor sleet, nor hail will keep the shoppers at bay. why the massive storm is setting up for the ideal shopping weekend for retailers. and a fox business exclusive, former federal reserve chief alan greenspan on what he says is holding back the economy. las vegas as close as your laptop, new jersey rolling the dice on online gambling, but can virtual and land-based casinos thri s

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Transcripts For CSPAN2 Book Discussion 20140323

this country for reasons that hope for reasons that help to layout a little bit in my talk, and if you're kind enough to get the book i would be happy to sign it for you afterwards. the notion of success i think lay at the heart of the american dream. and, in fact, the idea of the individual living head in the race of life, pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps as the old of them are saying, i think it's embedded in our national dna. all of us avert i think some version of go make something of yourself, go make something out of yourself. usually from anxious parents during our adolescence when we prepared to go off to college. and actually i think from the founding days of the republic, boosters and moralists, politicians and shysters, although i risk redundancy on those last two i think -- [laughter] they been instructing people in the best way to improve their social status and increase their material possessions, which are the two big parts of course of the success formula. in the 18th century benjamin franklin -- and actually i have some slides if this works. there we go. benjamin franklin i think was the first great success writer in american history in poor richard's on mic written in the early part of the 18th century and then, of course, in his autobiography that was eventually published later in the 1700s. franklin stressed the work ethic and threat, in particular as the ways to success. all the settings i'm sure most of you have heard, are w early o bed, early to rise makes a man healthy wealthy and wise. a penny saved is a penny earned, and on and on anything but a few decades later in the 19 city, horatio alger, he came the great avatar success in the 19th century the great for miller of success. it a series of novels that in all honesty were literary train wrecks, but culturally i think they are gems. really interesting cultural documents indeed. many best selling books, strive to succeed, all of them with very similar titles. essentially he told the same story over and over and over again. you just change the characters a little bit. the story was a virtuous young man often and often came from the countryside to the big city, and he climbed to success. he rose to distinction through upstanding character, self-denial and unstinting labor. and for victorian individuals up until about the end of the 19th century, alger's directors were kind of a cultural gospel. what about the modern era? who has been the great avatar of success writing in the american century as it is often termed? well, it happens to be a missourian from the northwestern part of the state. i was born up near marysville, rose to become i think the greatest purveyor of success principles in modern life. and his efforts inspired a horde of disciples who have followed in his wake. and that is of course a dale carnegie, the subject of my talk in the subject of my biography. in one sense this book which is still one of the best selling books in american history, some people rank it among the top three or four best selling nonfiction books still in our collective lives. in a certain sense of carnegie in his book i think operator in the tradition of franklin and alger, but as we'll see here and a little bit he also recast i think their instructions to reflect many of the issues and conditions that were in modern life. "how to win friends and influence people," in fact, i argued is the kind of brilliant reflection of deeper values that americans have come to embrace in the 20th century. but carnegie, i was shocked to discover a few years ago, has never had a full-scale biography. and so explaining his work is sort of a burden of my book trend in which came out last october -- "self-help messiah," i would know this book is essential reading for everyone who does not want to be an abject and miserable failure in modern america -- [laughter] it also along those lines i think makes a wonderful inspirational gift for graduation, bar mitzvahs, wedding showers, christmas, all national holidays and major world religions, et cetera, et cetera. that paragraph was written by my publisher actually. [laughter] at any rate, carnegie himself i think offers a fascinating story of rags to riches in his own life. he was born, as i noted before, up near marysville missouri into a youth sort of grinding poverty, and he spent a youth i think it would influence on the one hand by his fathers repeated failures as a farmer in the late 19th century, and on the other hand, by his mother's intense protestant schism of 10 -- that is his older brother behind him, clinton. young dale carnegie was very bright, very intellectually curious and he found a kind of escape from his boyhood and youthful poverty by developing a talent for public speaking. his mother was something of a lay preacher in that part of the state in this period, and dale goes off to college at the state teachers college at lawrenceburg, it becomes a kind of big man on campus as a public speaker, as an orator. back in those days he was quite slight and he had big ears. he was sort of self-conscious and she discovered the only way he could compete with football players was to be an orator in the late 19th century, and that's sort of what he made his mark. but then things got very interesting. he's very ambitious, very tired of the midwest, and he was sort of grating against the religious heritage of his family, in particular his mother. and he wanted to make it. he wanted to get ahead. and what he did was he headed off to new york to make good, the old saying of course was the west, young man. carnegie of course went east, young man to make his fortune. but success did not come immediately with a dale carnegie. he went through, as a matter of fact, a kind of lengthy roster that period i guess i would call it where he struggled through a series of jobs. he was a meat salesman, an actor, a car salesman, a magazine journalist, a failed novelist. and he even entered into the kind of partnership. i found this quite interesting, with lowell thomas, the famous writer and journalist in the lawrence of arabia showed -- shows that lowell thomas put together after world war i your carnegie became his right hand man and was are involved in putting on these shows both in england and in the united stat states. after all, of this, carnegie comes back to new york and he finally settles into a kind of solid career as an instructor of public speaking. and he began his efforts at the ymca in brooklyn, part-time teaching a small number of students in the late 1900s into the 1920s and he steadily refined his techniques and refined his course and begin to establish a national reputation but by about 1930 or so, his public speaking course, the leader famous carnegie course is so popular the thousands are attempting it. .. that sounds fairly well. and then he wrote a very chatty kind of book that encapsulated a lot of radio pieces that is called little known facts about well-known people. carnegie is doing pretty well in this. i've to their early 30s. it is minute 30s however that carnegie in a way gets his big break. and the heart of the great depression, the period when he becomes a cultural icon for the first time. a man named leann chin can, and an acquisitions editor at simon & schuster with her lunch was on a very influential career after this. he takes carnegie scores. he loves it. he decided carnegie's ideas need a much broader audience and he convinces carnegie to read about come asserted that his lectures together. carnegie is reluctant. he had submitted some book manuscripts to simon & schuster. they turned him down menu is disgruntled about that. he had to document to it, but eventually carnegie bands to the task. in december 1936 he published a book called "how to win friend and influence people." when this book came out and asked of us being put together, both carnegie and the press had fairly modest hope for its sales. they hoped it would sell a reasonable amount of copies that everyone with make a little bit of money and go home happy. but the results were astonishing and they quickly sort of overwhelmed the dictations of everyone involved. copies begin to fly off the shelves everywhere in united states and four months after its release stunned leann chip kidd wrote this letter should carnegie in which he set, and i quote, i found this at the carnegie archives, if one year ago a friend of mine what he told me today i was going to send to an author the 250,000 copy of this book, i would've preferred him to the nearest psychiatrist or to bob herbert lee for believe it or not care to. how to win friends would go on to sell a million copies in the first year or year and a half and by the time the dust has settled, it is estimated the book has sold somewhere in the vicinity of 30 million copies in the united states around the globe. as joined a select group of books and american history that have combined enormous popularity with the genuine cultural influence. books like the bible, "uncle tom's cabin," gone with the wind, mckinsey report, baby and child care and last but not least, "50 shades of gray." [laughter] that none of you i'm sure know anything about that last one. the people question i think is why they carnegie's book proved to be so enormously popular than 1830s? what happened in the culture that made it so responsive to a carnegie had to say? in the broadest sense, what i argue in this book is carnegie princeton in a formula for success and "how to win friend and influence people" that was particularly attuned to send key qualities in modern american life in the 20th century. it was aimed very shrewdly at the legions of new white-collar workers in modern america. people in the middle class who are working in a hundred big companies and complex bureaucracies that had emerged after the beginning of the 20th century in business, and government, and education, and media and entertainment as well over the early decades of the 1900s. there was an america, a very large army of clerks and office workers and middle managers come a salesman, advertisers, marketers, and teachers, salary employees of a kind spirit these are people who wanted to succeed, but they are people for the old advice of benjamin franklin and horatio alger had a very limited appeal in certain limited use in their everyday fives. the franklin and alger advice about hard work, for moral character, credential habits of saving and thrift, all of this site inc. seemed irrelevant in many ways in this new society where in peoples daily lives, and bureaucratic settings, and they were involved in interactions on a daily basis with dozens and maybe even hundreds of people over and over again. the old standard of hardy individualism just did not do much for them. carnegie's book i think addressed the situation directly and presented an irresistible message that people responded to very enthusiastically. the message is quite simply that one could find success in the modern world by developing attractive personal trade by developing and displaying of confidence, but i develop reading skills in human relations and most simply, as carnegie would put it, by getting people to like you. that was the game in a lot of ways. carnegie insisted msn if you may know you had this book, he insists on it over and over again that getting ahead in life from securing a better job, make even more money from enjoying the esteem of your coworkers and so on, that all of this was mainly a matter now in the 20th century of enhancing your personal attractiveness. and with perky enthusiasm and carnegie was nothing if not perky i might add, he promised that is the highest book would help any individual, these are his words, to get out of the mental road, to think new thoughts, acquire new visions come up a new impatience, win people to your way of thinking. influence your prestige coming ability to get things done. the client had no complaints, avoid arguments come at e3 human contacts smooth and pleasant. so what was the significance of this new success created that carnegie shapes in this book? first of all, what i would suggest you admit you this is very important, what carnegie's message of body was a very significant shift in american culture from character to personality. as i often tell my students in my various courses, and the victorian age in the 1800s, the standard was one of stern morality, self-control, the character ethic is the victorians like to call it. and that is a regulated individual contact. what you have in the 20th century and recently is this fast socioeconomic change they really remade american society, the american economy and american culture and significant -- and. what you have is a new kind of america that takes shape that is increasingly devoted to consumer abundance, to bureaucratic definitions of work, to leisure and entertainment as keith to the peace lives. and in this world coming to your legs via private taurean self-denial seemed antiquated completely out of touch. i think you see a quite clearly in carnegie's own life is that the old hide down structures of character began to recede into the background and instead new sparkling images of personality began to take its place and it becomes central to a new code of individualism. what you have to say new notion out work character shaping of the healthy, magnetic, charismatic personal image rather than the old internalized the date of old fogies. the new charismatic personality is an crucial to your access in the new world self-fulfillment and bureaucracy and the consumer economy. and "how to win friend and influence people," kerr-mcgee captured all of this beautifully and in the book is a set these new principles of personality and what would become his trademark breathless panic total spyro. he makes this book really the type book for success in modern america, in modern american culture. and worse, i'm pretty convinced would've horrified the victorian audience only 20, 30, 40 years before coming he declares in this book, and i quote, one could no longer put much faith in the old adage that hard work alone is the magic key that will unlock the door to our desires. instead, he insists that it's the ability to handle people with your personality. and he repeats this over and over again in the book that is the key to achieve that,, material prosperity in modern society. success in america, kerr-mcgee tells his reader over and over again, depends on getting along with other people, working smoothly with others in a kind of bureaucratic mill you and subtly maneuvering to assume leadership in groups of people. and he tailors this advice in the book to those kinds of principles. these are all his principles and his praises and i'm just going to recite a few of them. i think you see exactly what i mean. make the other person feel important. don't criticize others. establish a positive atmosphere and avoid hard events. be hardy and approbation and lavish praise. but the other fallowfield that the idea is his. and finally, the icing on the cake, make people like you. to this end, he incurred just success speakers i think in the book to engage in self-examination. it's an old habit of course in american culture at the victorians did this. the puritans even before then. you always need to look inward to be sure you're on the straight and narrow path. but what is different with carnegie's injunctions along these lines if they change shape vary dramatically. the puritan scum of the victorians said looking to yourself to examine your character flaws, too mixing them in feelings, your feelings and morality the human being. carnegie has a very different idea. he tells readers to keep a file the one he did in his right there in the carnegie archive sale and it's called ken and i quote, dm for things i have done. what is fascinating about it is sony's injunctions to self-examination, there's nary a weird about spiritual feelings, falling back, anything of the kind. instead, but will focus is on social errors. and carnegie's rendering of this is to forget people's names, to blurt out negative comments, to talk too much around other people, to fail to make other people feel comfortable, to argue with people instead of tactfully suggesting new ways thinking about the, to overlook other people's viewpoints and not listen to them and to make sweeping statements that other people found irritable. those were awful things i've done and kerr-mcgee urged people to sort of like the side of one's personality. pardon me. here's where the frog part comes and i think. with carnegie in other words, what i would suggest is you can see american values shifting from the old notion of entry moral error to shaping one's advantage in the impressions you make upon other people in a kind of modern setting. so character personality is one big source of its significance. secondly, in addition to that shed, what you've all see and "how to win friend and influence people" is a new emphasis historically on psychology as the key dynamic in modern american life. as a number of critics and historians has observed in the last 30 or 40 years and probably most famous date, philip rieff and a brilliant book called tribe as a therapeutic, dave suggested in the modern world the kind of slow erosion of connections among people, community ties, religious obligations and so on, what's been produced in the modern west, particularly in america is this ideal type of psychological man, this minor character type is preoccupied with self-awareness, preoccupied with self-esteem, is engaged in a kind of unceasing quest for fulfillment in one way or another for emotional well-being. psychological man in sure it has jettison morality for a repeat as a way to be in the world. i think it is quite clear that these new therapeutic sensibility began spreading in american culture by the middle decades of the 20th century and it has become i think an enormous influence in our modern values as it has spread into her thinking about education, childbearing, family life, religion, even political ideology as well. carnegie i think was at the absolute part of this process of the kind of psychologizing of modern american culture. he liked to present himself as an expert, in his phrase, practical psychology. he emerged as really the first great popularizer at this newfound stress on mental health and self-esteem. the carnegie course that he presented all the way up to his death in the mid-1950s try to eradicate with carnegie called the inferiority complex that people would read into these courses. he advertised the course for its reliance on the significant discoveries of modern psychology and "how to win friend and influence people" come you may know if you've read the book, he instructed readers that when you are dealing with people, and this is his first, we are not dealing with creatures of logic. we are dealing with creatures of emotion. throughout that book, littered in each and every chapter are the psychological ideas, sort of popularized by william james adler, sigmund freud and a whole host of lesser figures. and using them, carnegie uses his readers over and over again to continuously gauge the psychological needs of people involved with. coworkers, families, associate and so on and society clients to try to meet those needs with psychological sensitivity. he advocated, for example, positive thinking and the art appreciation, which he described as the easiest of a psychological techniques to help people feel comfortable, to win friends. in his book, "how to win friend and influence people." the principles of psychology easy for you to apply in your daily contacts and it would create among readers a new way of life he says that will pave the way to success. so, from this collection of cultural ingredients, success, ideology, these notions of charismatic personality, positive thinking, human relations cannot repeat the quote being, carnegie created but i think was his ultimate legacy in american culture. that is the establishment of a robust self-help movement that is shaped modern american culture in fundamental ways indeed. in the wake of his stunning success, a host of dazzling popular self-help gurus have spread out over the american landscape. in an intensive peel, tony bobbins, robert schuller, mary ann williamson, m. scott peck, deepak shope, stephen covey, the one mentioned earlier in the introduction, oprah winfrey, countless others. those are the all-star things. they have seen mandatory daily lives, presenting messages from a personal improvement, human relations, or punic adjustment as techniques for getting ahead and prospering in achieving self-fulfillment in our modern life. but carnegie's asic notion i think embodied in "how to win friend and influence people," that the individual who learns carnegie's words to fine arts of getting along with people in everyday business and social contact will ensure a more profit, morally share and what is infinitely more important, more happiness and business and in home life. this book, i aimed became the text of this modern access create. i think dale carnegie asserted the godfather of self-help in modern american life. carnegie went on to a rich and full life after the publication of this book in the 1930s. he flourished as a beloved teacher, who in the carnegie course of the her the 40s and 50s still spend really the great majority of his time with carnegie course around the country, franchised out over the united states and eventually around the globe and still graduates hundreds of people every year from the course, which is the floor shame. he became a best selling author once again in 1948, with a boat called how to stop worrying and start living, which was a kind of guide book for stressed-out suburbanites after world war ii who had become prosperous, but they still weren't happy. carnegie sort of wrote this book as a way to ease them towards happiness. i might also note after finally marrying at a fairly advanced stage, he became a father for the first time at the fairly advanced age of 63, something i can identify with. i didn't quite make that mark, but i did my part here pictured here at the younger woman he married, his daughter, donna who was born in the early 50s. so he does become a father in this period. at least officially. i also feel obligated to note that actually one of the most interesting things about this book i stumbled across whether i would describe this curious letters that were in the carnegie archives and neither carnegie family made their carnegie people knew anything about them. i played sherlock holmes a little bit and ended up discovering the secret life till carnegie had that he had a long loving relationship with a married woman and a child resulted from this the carnegie believed with his and with absolutely no one knowing about it in his family up to about one year ago, he supported this grow financially and emotionally as well. he became good friends not only with his mistress, but with his mistress' husband, who is a blind man who had studied to be a rabbi. one never knows what you're going to run across in research. actually, it's a fascinating story about sort of a larger context i suppose of winning friends and influencing people. if you want to know if that's all about coming to to buy the book. so to bring all of this to a close, i think in an overarching sense, what i would like to leave you with is the idea i guess they go carnegie's impact as an historical figure was really profound. i think is the greatest popular spokesman for modern ideas about success in the culture that we still inhabit today. i think whatever you make of the modern era peter culture of personality and self is deemed, you have to knowledge the crucial offers of an ambitious farmboy from missouri in shaping his powerful role. long ago of course it was thomas jefferson who coined the most american phrases, the pursuit of happiness, but he still carnegie i would suggest you defined the modern meaning of that phrase. the end. [applause] [applause] [inaudible] >> thanks for your talk. just a quick question. in view of the fact that dale carnegie had such an impact on multiple generations, and also considering that rush limbaugh is in the missouri hall of fame, i couldn't help but wonder if indeed go carnegie is in the missouri hall of fame. thank you. >> is that you're going to ask something different. i believe he is coming at us as a of fact. i also just found out the warrensburg folks called me a few weeks ago when i think they are creating a hall of fame at the central missouri university it is called now and they will have a ceremony in the fall for carnegie. they've commissioned him and so on. so yes, he is gaining recognition. >> thank you. so you mentioned the fool things i've done. they are kind of nonspecific or did they mention who they happen with or what was the context with all those clicks the private writing this much like his public writing. he is sort of lashing his elves. joe schmoe another people coming in now, he cast us a little bit. they couldn't get a word on a choice. there's all kinds of examples that encounter since basic ones where you have the man who wrote the book, never to apply sound principles themselves. sometimes he met them, sometimes he fell short. very specific. >> i was wondering how much you felt these principles apply in 24 at team and that the things that come to my mind in terms of influence in people, i think we probably want a koch brothers may be to write a book. and the internet, for example, as the source of information and the source of influence seems to overshadow a great deal and individual personality and their agreeableness for their ability to get along. >> that's a very good question i think. i think my answer to that would be kind of complex. as far as the internet goes, i am sent to the internet is changing our life and our culture in ways that we are only dimly beginning to appreciate. the honest answer to that is i don't know because the students that i teach these days, every year they seem a little more air land to name because they are coming out of this kind of social media interconnected culture where they had a very different way of link, literally from those of us and a slightly earlier period. in that sense, i am not sure. in a broader sense, i think it's principles are very applicable as far as interacting with other people because i still think it is a fact that economically and socially and culturally among kinds of ways this big or craddick institutions that still structure a good deal of what we do and the worklife many of us have this and that adding. those principles still work. the example that keeps to mind is a personal one that is mentioned in the introduction. the chairman of the history department for about five years. i used to have a full head of hair before that. and that will drive you to distraction or drink, one of the other. i found myself in as the chair of an organization of big ego type people that i began relying on the principles of dale carnegie without even needing about it, that instead of arguing and fighting and trying to impose things, it works a lot better if you sort of slide around the average pages entry people in in a positive light, let other people think it's their idea, if human life works better that way. they are still a potent ons. >> i've heard that it's called carnegie hall in new york. my impression is maybe it is first theatrical? >> right, right. >> shannon is with the name -- [inaudible] >> that's a good question, too. actually carnegie hall is named after the steel magnate industrialist. there is an interesting story that connects into dale carnegie. kim monkey originally spelled his name carnegie. that was the way you spelled his name until he is in his 20th and he went to his new york his new york city and got an office in carnegie hall. being a shrewd boy he was, he decided he should change the name of the spelling of his last name because he said his explanation was everybody pronounced it that way anyway. so there is a little bit more to it. the other thing i found fascinating when he changed the spelling of his name, and hubert moved the day from his name. [laughter] >> carnegies advisors uniquely american. i wonder if this book had worldwide expect dan's and in what culture is was it very much accepted in? >> that is a good question, too. it is my impression from doing some reading i guess about sort of the aftermath of carnegie after his dad at the internationalization of the carnegie course in the carnegie principles sort of followed the trail of westernization and western expansion of the american economy after world war ii. i think particularly western ideas have to do with bureaucratic capitalism and the way things work in a think that begins to infiltrate markets around the world, that is for the action is. i believe someone at the carnegie companies told me increasingly first survey gaffer was in a big effort was immunized, but increasingly in recent years it has been in asia. the logic of that becomes a little clearer as markets begin to permeate in asian economies as well. so i think that is the general trigger areas that. >> can i ask the last question quite >> absolutely. you sort of mentioned in passing a religious up bringing. dh lawrence writing about benjamin franklin and other parts of american literature very critically that american literature is a part of the sort of civic religion and misses the tragic elements and life. how would you describe carnegie? was a silly religious man later in life? it clearly was when he was younger and influenced by his mother in particular. >> that's a good question. what popped into my mind with the other dh lawrence taylor's never trust the tailor, trust detail. detail of carnegie is this, carnegie overthrew religion in his life as a young and. he became sort of a nonstick and revolted against his mother's stern protestantism. interestingly in his late eyes, i was say about mid-40s, the last decade or so of his life, he returned to religion, but in a very peculiar sort of way. he did not return in terms of theology or denomination, but he returned to religion almost as a kind of meditation. in the last book, he talks a lot about the usefulness of religion. it's very much in a therapeutic setting. he says you now, and traveling around the country. i often every day take 10 annutes and i find it church.

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Transcripts For FBC The Willis Report 20140902

home depot. according to reports, several banks are warning a massive amount of debit and credit cards went on sale in the cyber underground, the most likely source, home depot. several banks believe this breach could have started as early as april. if this true, are we looking at a breach bigger than target last year? joining me now, adam levin, chairman and founder of identity theft 911. adam, welcome back to the show. reports on grubs today, banks reporting this could be a massive, massive breach. why does the information come from the banks? >> because they usually see the activity before anybody else does because they will see activity with cards. the activity will look a little bit out of place. they then have systems that determine patterns. of and then they try to check back to where the patterns eminate from. it would appear a lot of patterns are eminating from what we hear, it is under investigation, from possibly home depot. gerri: we should say home depot is not saying this is a massive broken, not yet. they say they're investigating it. that is about all they're saying. according to krebbs, this could be bigger than target breach last year. that was a breach of 40 million payment card numbers. as many as 70 million americans affected with some amount of information, personal data at risk in the marketplace for people to steal. how can we go through this again and again and not do something to try to fix the situation? >> the problem they're trying to fix the situation. they're talking about chip and pin cards. that doesn't solve the problem when it comes to online. but this software is so pernicious and it has been so difficult to detect, this malware that they put on the point of sale system, question, target, it was put on their point of sale system through a vendor. gerri: that's what happened here? >> they don't know. they don't know how it got on. gerri: that is not reassuring. >> although know so far, if it happened this back off ends up on point of sale system an like a keystroke logging device. it basically gathers data. it is transmitted to the point where they get credit card data, they get debit card data. and ultimately it is transmitted back to russia. gerri: let me tell you what upsets me. this apparently happened back in april yet we're just hearing about it now. in most states, nearly all states have some kind of security breach law that requires companies to report these breaches much closer to when they happened. so to me, i find it unlikely that in all of this time home depot has had no idea that this problem existed. what is your reaction? >> well sometimes, it does take a while to actually determine that you have a problem. gerri: april? april? >> possibly so. sometimes also that there are situations where law enforcement says, you can not make announcement. we are investigating, if you look at all the breach laws, one of the exceptions is, if you're told by law enforcement, you are not to make announcement until they conclude their investigation. gerri: so home depot, thousands of stores. no doubt our viewers have been in home depot. i know i've been in home depot many times. so what should i be doing? >> well a number of things. one you should be checking your accounts daily, both your bank and credit card accounts. should be doing that anyway. you and i talk to people about that. gerri: we're talking about daily. i think adam has it exactly right. >> just a few minutes every day, people go that is too much time. really? how much time do you spend on email? how much do you, time do you spend on social networking? you need to do that. with your debit cards, change your pin numbers. >> change your pin on debit card. >> change your pin on the debit card to be safe, if you remember you used debit card at all at home depot store. this may not be the end of the story anyway. the federal authorities warned over 1,000 businesses and we're not talking about small business. we can be talking about massive businesses, that this back off software was going to prove a problem. that it was on point of sale systems. they weren't sure how many and where but their investigation has led them to believe over 1000 businesses were going to have the problem. >> i want to read a quick statement from home depot. here is what they're saying. we're looking into unusual activity and working with our banking partners in law enforcement to investigate. if we confirm a breach has occurred, we will make sure customers are notified immediate. so home, depot, looking into this. a lot of people looking into this. we'll tell you everything we know as soon as we know it. adam, thanks for being on the show. great to see you as always. >> thank you. gerri: also tonight, we have an important story about the mobile tracking device that you call a car. as of this week all cars sold in the u.s. must have a black box on board. but what is being recorded on this black box, just like an airplane black box and who has the rights to this information? we took to the road to find out. >> nothing like a great massage. we have six different massage programs. gerri: six? >> yep. and two of them actually are featuring a hot stone massage technology. gerri: when i think of women and cars i always think of safety. >> yeah. gerri: so what kind of safety features what kind of special technology do you have built into this? >> so we have a tremendous amount of safety and technology equipment in here. we have, basically all around the vehicle vary with us types of radar, both long-range, short-range, as well as ultrason i can or sound wave sensors. night view assist which is infrared radar. gerri: what. >> literally, obviously day time, not best use case, it is for a feature called night view assist plus, as you drive at night, detects a pedestrian or animal. it will bracket the pedestrian right on your screen. gerri: turns in front of you. don't have to look to the right. it is right in front of you. >> yeah. gerri: you may be stunned by the technology in six figure mercedes flagship you may be even more surprised what is coming to even the most basic cars sold in the united states. starting this month, all new cars sold here must have an event data recorder, often called a black box. the black box records a history of what you are doing or not doing behind the wheel. the theory being that the black box will capture the last moments leading up to a crash. the black box information includes how fast you were going, whether you were applying the gas or brakes and whether the airbag is inflated. unlike the black box in a jet liner, the one in your car does not record people's voices. gerri: look at that. wow, i feel like i'm in a discotheque. in case you were wondering the price on that 2014 mercedes? 12thousand. -- $128,000. we want to talk about black boxes today. here is one in my hand. this is in your car probably right now. who owns the information that this device records and how hard is it for law enforcement or insurance companies to get their hands on the data? for answers to that we're joined by the car coach, lauren fix. lauren, great to see you. >> great to see you. gerri: how much data is my car collecting on me? >> quite a bit. every 20 seconds it collects data. it knows how many times your vehicle started. it knows where you've gone. knows how many passengers. this is september 1st, the new regulations. all the data is being collected by every manufacturer. gerri: do you have brakes on, hands on steering wheel, what is your speed, are you wearing seatbelt, all these details, in case you have a crash, this is why the stuff was invented in the first place, right. >> right. gerri: we know what happened. but lauren, whose information is it. >> it belongs to you. you bought the car. however the car manufacturers use it when there is technical problem. in the last 20 starts we notice we had a problem with this data. we can get the vehicles back in the dealership. so it does collect good data but also access to the data can be for more people, you can't get it, other people can. gerri: apparently according to 14 states it is my data. nhtsa says it is my data. a lot of people say insurance companies want it. there is big fight, wild west for information coming out of this black box. one of my fears they will put, record more and more information. maybe not just 20 seconds. maybe 24 hours. >> right. gerri: talk about how think should have rights to this data, what reality is on the ground. does my insurer have rights to my black box date? if not this black box, another black box? >> insurance companies have been trying to people to put modules on onboard diagnostics to possibly get discount on insurance. that black box you showed will be on every single car. it has been on a lot of cars, since 2005. 62% of the cars on the road. what is interesting that data is used when there's an accident. let's say i hit you me. you say, no, i hit you. especially if there are injuries or severe crash, they can subpoena the information. information does belong to you. the 14 states do protect you you have to read the regulations, because if you read them carefully they can subpoena them. gerri: here is other thing i'm worried about. so i make a claim on my car insurance. something happened, i need something fixed. there is a gash in the front bummer, what do we do? so the insurance company says i have to see the black box because i want to see if you're going too fast where you were supposed to be. that is a possibility as well? >> that is possibility. they haven't gotten to that. when you have a crash, an investigator will come out, write it up. if it is something other than a gash they will say get a quote. as we get further and further along, they say, you know what, gerri, you got from point a to point b three times faster than our computers calculated and we'll send you a ticket. we'll raise your insurance rates. you tend to speed. you get from point a, to point b. listen all the smart tablets and devices we have, we are tracked consistently. think about the phone and your tablet of some type, they can track that as well. they know where i've been all day and where you have been all day. just access it. gerri: what i think is interesting, you think when you get in the car you hear thud of doors closing, this is my world. this is where i live. this is my private space. but it is less and less so. >> you pretty much don't have the privacy anymore. i discuss that all the time with people, used to be that was your place to think, like being in the shower. that is only place they haven't invaded yet. when it comes to the car, it is yours. you make the payments. there is driver privacy act supposed to protect consumers t hasn't done. and fourth amendment you would think protect you as consumer. it is your information. it doesn't necessarily protect. >> there is another bill making its way through the senate, writes same thing specifically with edr data. we'll see what happens to that. what is interesting about, hey, i will turn off the edr, right? disable it. >> don't want to do that. first off illegal, number one. number two it could affect passive safety systems and airbags. seatbelts have load tensioners and would not operate as well amongst other things. gerri: don't be doing that. i guess we have to wait to see how t works out. i hate to be in the situation where i think it is my data. i don't want the car testifying against m law. >> a lot of things you can do to protect yourself. shut off bluetooth when you leave car with valet. weil you're having dinner. i made a copy of your nav screen. went to the home. if you take your valet keys with you, they don't have access. gerri: there are saved consideration. if you are in a brutal car accident, this little device could decide where you should go given the way the car was hit. >> onstar does that. every manufacturer. kia as uvo. hyundai has blue link. all the different systems tell you have an accident. this is speed of accident. we can send a ambulance or emergency vehicle. for that it does make sense. giving away data or selling data is where i have concern. gerri: lots of worries. we talk about you can't shut it down, that's for sure. be sure not to do that. a lot of people are worried about their private data. we'll continue to talk about this. lauren, thank you. >> thank you. gerri: we want to know what you think. here is our question tonight. who showed own data from your car's black box, you, your insurance company or the government? log on to gerriwillis.com. vote on the right-hand side of the screen. i will share the results at the end of tonight's show. still a lot more to come at this hour, include your voice. your voice is important to us much. during the show, facebook or tweet me @gerriwillisfbn. grow to the website, gerriwillis.com. at the bottom of the hour i will read your tweets and your emails. next one ceo speaks out on president obama's war on coal which is slashing jobs across the country. stay with us. musical chairs. fun, right? welllllllll, not when your travel rewards card makes it so hard to get a seat using your miles. that's their game. the flights you want are blacked out. or they ask for some ridiculous number of miles. honestly, it's time to switch to the venture card from capital one. with venture, use your miles on any airline, any flight, any time. no blackout dates. and with every purchase, you'll earn unlimited double miles. from now on, no one's taking your seat away. what's in your wallet? gerri: the colbies in this country has been dealt another set back -- colbies. amazing this country puts out coal business. the u.s. is importing coal. we're the saudi arabia of coal, we're importing coal. ceo of alpha natural resources, kevin crutchfield. great to have you on the show. we were chatting in the break. i'm a coal miner's granddaughter. i have a vested interest whether coal jobs in the u.s. you say you have to lay people off right now? >> absolutely. we laid off 4,000 people last couple years. that is very challenging to look at somebody who has done nothing wrong and tell them because of nothing they have done, we don't have anything more for you. that is function of the overt regulatory environment we find ourselves in as well as cheap natural gas. gerri: so you recently notified 11 mines and 1100 miners in west virginia alone, their mines may be idled. we've been talking about how coal imports are up something like 44%. how can these two things be happening? >> right. coal miners never run from free market competition. you know what has been challenging for us has been the overt regulatory environment that we talked about. it has driven our costs up, that make other nations coal here more competitive. colombians, the indonesians, the russians even. they don't have the same environmental standards, the same safety standards that we have but they can compete on costs and it is costing our folks jobs right now. gerri: in a big way. we keep hearing stories from appalachia, west virginia, you name it, loss of jobs and impact as a matter of fact the heritage foundation conducted a report looking impact going forward of obama's war on coal. 600,000 jobs will be lost in the next 10 years. gdp will be cut by 2.2 trillion. family income. incomes are already down but they will be cut by another 1200 bucks. electricity price, thank you very much, for all of us up 20%. so the impacts are real. the impacts are large. what should be done in your view? what are the regulations that the president put in place that are so onerous and costing you so much? >> well there have been several. the most recent aimed at control of carbon dioxide. the most damaging one, regulation they're in the process of promulgating is the amount of carbon dioxide, emitted in a new electricity source. interestingly they set the threshold at a level that coal can not meet without technology -- gerri: by definition of regulations, coal was left out of the picture? >> coal can't comply with this new regulation. so it is effectively a defacto moratorium on any new coal-fired power plant construction in the united states. gerri: so no new plants will be built. >> no new plants. gerri: no new plants. you can't compete with coal coming from south america. you told me russia, for goodness sakes. i can't imagine why we would accept imports from russia? why would that be? we're at war with them. >> small amount went into the northeast. we don't know much about it. it is a very challenging environment, what we would ask, have a balanced debate around the costs and perceived benefits of these regulations to make sure that we're making smart decisions because what we see coming for sure is higher electricity prices. we saw that -- gerri: nobody wants that. it is burden on the american people. now you talked to people at the white house, you talk to people on the let, people like you, the coal industry, you're against any kind of efficiency standards, you're opposing them on every level. do you favor some kind of cleaner energy production? >> what we favor is a balanced approach to our energy needs as a nation. all of the above. we say all of the above and we actually mean it. when you look where our energy sources in the united states come from, 85% of it are fossil fuels. so we support a diversified portfolio over the long term on the basis of what makes sense from an economic and physics point of view. that's all we ask. not that hard. gerri: all those resources. we should use them. >> absolutely. we have more coal than anybody else in the world and yet we're trying to turn our backs on very industry that got us to this point as a nation to start with. gerri: kevin crutchfield, thanks so much for being on the show. >> thank you for having me. gerri: later in the show, celebrities, hacked, nude photos of some of the biggest stars are leaked. your information safe on the cloud? and next, a big moneymaker for cities across the country. but as usual chicago taking things too far? we'll have the latest on this scandal surrounding its red light cameras. you're not going to believe this. stay with us. if you take multiple medications, a dry mouth can be a common side effect. that's why there's biotene. it comes in oral rinse, spray or gel, so there's moisturizing relief for everyone. biotene, for people who suffer from dry mouth. 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'cause she's your baby girl. and now you're proud. a bundle of nerves proud. but proud. get a discount when you add a newly-licensed teen to your liberty mutual insurance policy. call to learn about our whole range of life event discounts. newlywed discount. new college graduate and retiree discounts. you could even get a discount when you add a car. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. gerri: apple is attempting damage control after hackers released nude pictures of hollywood starlets. the tech giant says it hasn't found a breach in its icloud and probing celebrity hacking points to a targeted attack. while apple maintains the icloud systems are secure, should consumers be cautious? with more on this joe lummis, the founder and ceo of cyber response. joe, what is the theory how this happened? how is it that people got in the icloud and able to get people's private pictures? >> weak password will be your culprit on that one. if you've got a password that is a word found in the english dictionary, using that in more than one location, chances are you're vulnerable. doesn't matter what system you're using, icloud, dropbox, going guesstimate you have to learn the methodology of understanding that you can not use simple passwords in today's day. gerri: everything is backed up to the cloud these days. if you think you're safe because, you got your phone in your hand and you haven't lost it, forget about that. because it is somewhere up on the cloud and people get a hold of it. 70% of online adults use at least one cloud service. that is one of the numbers we've seen. what else can be stolen from the cloud, joe? >> pretty much anything, whether it is your financial information, your identity, your personal files, your legal documents, your accounting files. anything that relatively depend on for a backup source can be taken. that is where you have to understand that, simple passwords and complex passwords are going to be need to be required in today's day. there are free tools out there that do that. gerri: absolutely right. lots of different apps you can do to store passwords. apps you can use to put together a password difficult to hack. should we not put things on the cloud? should you check the no box when filling out those forms about what is on the cloud and what isn't? >> i think that the conclude is okay if you take the right precautions. a strong password, insure that the vendor use as multilevel authentication, like two factor. when you send in, get a text message with special number and put in the ought then at thiscation number, awe then thecation number. understand what security measures the vendor is taking. do your homework out there. consumer smart shopping. gerri: apple is apparently teaming up with some of the biggest credit card issuers in the country and visa, american express. because of this icloud story, they want to make a mobile wallet, use your phone as credit card. but now i'm super worried about that because what happened with these pictures. is it going to be safe? >> that is for time to tell. i think when you come up with a new method of doing commerce we have to give it time for security measures to catch up with innovation. that is always the downside, right? everybody wants latest and great etf. security measures are often most difficult thing to catch up. we'll always be behind the eight ball. i think we need to give it time to adopt to a different method of commerce and using credit cards. let alone the credit cards today need to be changed because of what happened with target. before we make more change we need to fix what is currently out there. gerri: one of these actress, one solution to the problem, don't take pictures of yourself naked. we said that. >> good point. gerri: one of the act tests said she deleted photos. you tell me i deleted photo and it is not really gone? what is up with that? >> a lot of cloud users allow to you undelete. god forbid you delete something accidentally, your kids get ahold of it. they make it convenient to recover this that is again the downside of understanding what you do put up there and how you actually, truly delete it. it is again, a educational perspective. blind assumptions will always be the culprit in this type of conversation as well as type of threats. gerri: blind assumptions. joe, thank you for explaining. appreciate it. >> thank you. >> coming up, will this be a september to remember on wall street? and, red light, green light, is one of america's largest cities gaming, gaming the traffic control system to make money for the city? tell you all about it, stay with us. gerri: chicago's red plight cameras are at the center of a major scandal, a top city official, and his accomplices are targets of a federal investigation and criminal prosecution, our next guest is the first to break the story on the suspicious spikes in ticket issues, david kid wel for chicago tr tribune, you are the reporter who broke this story. so, start us at the beginning, what are the issues with the cameras? >> well, we manageed to obtain fought the city for, obtained a database of more than 4 million tickets that had been issued by this program since 2007, we balloted them on a chart, tickets by day, an ekg of every camera, we found suspicious spikes at specific intersections in the city, tens of thousands, where cameras would normally issue 3 tickets a day were suddenly issueing to 56 tickets a day, then. all of a sudden back to normal again. so we presented this findings to the city, all the way in january, they to this day, have been unable to explain why, woo have spend -- we have spent last 6 months investigating. gerri: why, why. but also, how much dough is the city bringing in with this. >> since it began in 2003, nearly $500 million in traffic fines. gerri: and this is not usual, this is not what most cities do. they are not makeing that kind of money out of red light cameras, which i know our viewers don't like that much. tell me how this came to be? what does your investigation show? >> well, it started with as you said, this bribery investigation, we got tips about some cozy relationships between the company that had this contract, red flicks traffic systems ink out of arizona, and a city official who oversaw and helped bring them to the city into 2003. and just today, that city official was arraigned on federal charges, 17 counts, involving what federal government has said is a $2 million bribery scheme between him, another one of his chicago friends who was high -- hired as a consultant of the company, and the ceo of the company who has been charged and will be arraigned next week. in the course of covering that. we thought, if the contract is corrupt what about the program? that is when we went after the tickets. we have been investigating reasons for these things, we been pulling the tickets, we have found cases where what they are enforcing at the intersections suddenly changes, for instance, all of the -- for weeks and days, they are not charging or not captures right turns on red, then during this spike all right turns on red. we found cases where the yellow light times have fluctuateed. during the spike. going from 4 seconds to 3 seconds, we talked with experts about this. that is what they say is not fair, you can't change the rules. gerri: you can't change the rules. nobody likes that but what you have also found, in this whole scenario is that, the see manager accused of taking -- city manager accused of taking bribes, company in center of this road flicks hired former campaign manager of rahm emanuel, they are tight as a tick. what is wrong with -- what is wrong with this town? why is there -- this looks like blatant corruption to me, am i right? >> when rahm emanuel first took office. hoo he was pushing the expansion of red light camera to speed cameras. we're now dealing with that program here in this city of chicago as well. it is pr proliferates, much like the red light camera did in daily administration. but there is a great deal of secrecy in government here in chicago and the state of illinois. a great deal of career poletitions -- politicians and so my job, is never going to go away here. gerri: investigative reporter for the chicago tribune, david kidwel thank you so much. >> thank you great to be here. gerri: now we want to hear from you, we told you this week all cars sold in u.s. must have what is called a black box like planes, who should own that data? you? your insurance company? the government. here is what some of you are tweeting me. let me tell you, you are on fire. jack, it should be yours but should be subject to search pursuant to a court order, in a criminal or civil case. the driver of an insurance company should own it. keep the government out of it. >> and why ask. it is a given that government will have access to the data. just like cell phone records, and seizing your computer, gary, said does not matter what we think, government will get it anyway, a lot of anger about this, i feel your pain. >> when we come back, good news regarding america's fight against obesity, next, will stocks sink or soar in september, we cover our assets with forecasts about your 401(k). and advice on what you should do next with your money. here is your consumer gauge with the numbers you need to know, stock market up 8% this year. we'll be right back. gerri: another record-setting day on wall street, s&p 500 briefly touching a new intraday high, but stocks entering first time of the year for returns, today the dow and s&p 500 ended down, do i have that right? yes, down from friday. so should investors brace for a correction? recovering your assets with greg millia. president of millia advisory group, tim spease, and liz miller, president of summit place, financial advisors. last week was like 1999. i mean it fell great, stocks were moving higher. now reports that september is water month, i will start with greg. what is you make of that, do we look forward to a bad september? is that what you forecast? >> i don't know about september. i am concerned about the market as a whole. i think we're sitting at top -- some real highs as far as where markets come from. looking back, i know that morgan stanley released number numbers. s&p 3,000 32020,000, by 2020. that almost made me chuckle. >> where are we going then? >> down, sideways to down. >> sideways to down. well, liz, you, only losers over the last year were people who were not you know opting into the market, right? if you done play, you done -- if you didn't play, you don you dit gain, what is your outlook now? >> i think we could have a correction, but it is unpredictable, only unique i thing about september, is the next month, you need a several year outlook, if you are going to be in the equity market, there will be corrects on the way, you have to stay in the market through the corrections. gerri: stay in. would not pull a little bit of money aside, put it in cash to you know just in case? >> i would never do that just in case. what i would say in today's market, is you have a number of individual positions that are short-term highs, i always encourage our investors to take profit off the table, and perhaps in this environment, you would keep that in cash. but you could keep that in cash for three more years. we don't know that there is any particular reasons for a correction. corrections have come every 36 months or every 50 months, i am bullish, i would not be surprised. gerri: tim. the hard question for you. we'll move from tapering, which is an easy way of getting away from excess, juice that federal reserve has been puting into the system. to a pain they will raise rates on us, what does that transition look like in the equity market. >> i think investors that are looking for long-term, they will see some perhaps more attractive yields on short side, on other hand, looking at global economy growth, forecasted to between 3 3.7, and 3.9% this year, that would tell you that could be buoyant for stocks in the world. >> say, even in europe, is not having a great year economically you should invest offshore? >> no, i would say, globally, a well diversified portfolio, which is exposeed to global equit positions, and -- equity positions and even fixed income is most prudent for those investors with more than a 5 year horizon, and proper risk tolerance. gerri: greg bought up this idea that morgan stanley is super bullish so on goldman sachs forecasting big numbers for s&p by year end, greg, you don't see that i'm curious about, a lot of those professionalining mr.s hae missed much -- managers have missed. the the bull market circumstance this late day gamesmanship, we'll keep the doors open, and advise people to buy? >> yes, in the short. i look at, again, from 2000, if you have a different philosophy of being in the stock market. but the reality is right now today, 14 years later, the s&p 500 return is below 1.5%, that is awful. gerri: where is a better place to be? >> fixed income. if you have been 5 to 7 percent range, the entire time you have outperformed market. gerri: okay, quickly to liz. one more round. are stocks overvalued here? robert schuller said, so overvalued, and expensive? >> i disagree, the ratio has brought a tool to us. gerri: robert schullerp schedulo based on a ton of reseen. >> it is but, also, we have super high p/es from 09 making it lest -- look different. gerri: tim. >> this year has been a lowest volatility in the equity market. as of friday up 8.22%, hitting new highs long-term investors, telling us they are comfortable in this environment. gerri: stop worrying tim says. you this so much, greg, tim and liz. >> thank you. >> thanks. gerri: now to some shocking footage, switching gears to mention, eye change of gears, shocking footage released by isis, terroristing or saingingis that have beheaded steven sotloff. >> officials say they are still studying this internet video that purports to show beheading of american journalist steve sotloff by isis, but they have not been able to confirm it is authentic. >> if it is genuine, we're sickened by this brutal act, taking the life of another american citizen. our hearts go out to the sotloff family, we'll provide more information as it becomes available. >> the execution of sotloff if confirmed would be the second killing of an american journalist in over two weeks by isis, isis beheaded james foley last month as you recall, new video out today is titled eye a second message to america. the excursioner appears to be the same person said i am back obama. and condemns american bombings against isis in iraq, saying we take this opportunity to warn the government who entered into the evil alliance of america against the islamic state to back off and leave us alone, it closes with another man believeed to be british hostage, david haynes an aide worker and inflies he is next. gerri: has president obama weighed in on this. >> no, he left for his trip to europe. to air force one a reporter shouted him a question, he ignored it he has a press conference in estonia in 11 hours from now, and this will be the first question he gets asked about. gerri: well no doubt about that. peter thank you. >> you bet. gerri: and still to come, my two cents more, next turns out americans are getting it right with our eating habits, we have details about how you are doing it better, after the break. we've never sold a house before. (agent) i'll walk you guys through every step. there are a lot of buyers for a house like yours. (husband) that's good to know. gerri: health expert say that obesity breaks nearly 80 million adults in u.s., good nuzzo that americans are eating better, new data shows that eating habits in u.s. issue improving, with more on the findings registers dietitian, all right, what is the silver lining in this? explain result. >> study found that americans are doing better. okay? they did a study back in 1999. gerri: give us credit. >> i will, we were at a 40 out of 110. now they looked at 10 years later up to 47. so, yes, we're not half way there. bubut we did make some improvement. >> are hard-core. i'm trying to give people credit for doing the right thing, 92 choosing a salad over a hamburger. >> we don't need to be 100% but we should be higher. gerri: the big issue is cost of obesity, something likes there are within 47 billion. >47-- $147 billion.>> it could t is expensive. if we take better care of ourselves hopefully it would not cost everyone else so much money. gerri: talk about improvement noted by the study. how do we improve? >> they felt it was by default, there were less transfats in the diet. they actually felt that people were consuming less tran fats, whether or not it because they have been taken away from a lot of foods or maybe, they made healthier choices. like, they were not eating as much fast-food perhaps or not as many cakes and candy and that stuff that might have transfats. gerri: i prefer to think we're all doing the right thing, and making our own food, and chopping up our veggies, cary thank you. >> you're welcome. gerri: we'll be right back. get , they think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america. whenwork with equity experts who work with regional experts who work with portfolio management experts that's when expertise happens. mfs. because there is no expertise without collaboration. gerri: nhtsa requires all cars to have an even data recorder, a black box, the controversy goes on who should own the black boxes, we asked you, 95% of you said, we should. i agree, 4% said insurance company. 1% the government. and tonight, forget the tea party, internal revenue service has a new target, lunch. that is right, taxman said that freebie gourmet lunches doled out by cafeterias are fair game, but irs is not going after individuals but about the companys that serve them up, google, facebook and twitter, high view this is small potatos that irs should be ignoring there are bigger fish to fry. like fixing culture that wiped clean lois lerner's government issued blackberry after congress began investigating irs's targeting of conservative nonprofits, stick to your knitting, is what my mom said, that is my two cents more, coming up it could, latest on debate over who owns the information in your car, we will talk with the sense to ever whom wants to help you protect the data that is being recorded in that little black box. that is it for tonight's willis report, thank you for joining us, remember to dvr the show if you can't catch us live, have a good night, "making money" with charles payne is next. charles: tonight on "making money," celebrity having a hard time getting to us buy music and go to movies. a massive breach of their privacy may bring security to the cloud. cloud will know everything i in and must be more secure than a cracker jack box. wei explore the disconnect, your rage and fear about this economy. and a list of what a call, an income list recovery. and criminalization of american business, we're talking extortion racket that keeps executives out of prison. and the true victims getting crumbss. how do we get real

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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20150403

two separate passenger jets trying to land in seattle, struck by lightning. good evening. the historic deal with iran in a moment. and already, outrage tonight. does it go far enough? but we begin this evening with that massive terror attack, gunmen in combat gear, storming a college campus in kenya. into dorms, reportedly taking aim at christians. this woman wounded, being helped away. at least 147 killed in cold blood. it began early this morning and lasted for hours. police crouched there, hunting for the gunmen. tonight, the four suspected gunmen now dead. the al qaeda-linked terror group, al shabab, claiming responsibility. in recent weeks, calling for attacks here in the u.s., citing the mall of america. abc's chief global affairs correspondent martha raddatz leading us off. >> reporter: terrified students struggling to walk, escaping a massacre that lasted more than 13 hours. it began before sunrise, the terrifying thud of a grenade at the university gates. then gunfire. terrorists strapped with explosives going from dormitory to dormitory. the gunmen were methodical, reportedly demanding to know who was muslim and who was christian. anyone who said they were christian was killed on the spot. with the siege still underway, al shabab, an al qaeda affiliate, claims responsibility, calling it "an operation against infidels." the kenyan military descending on the scene, tanks, guns drawn. two hours after the attack began, the four gunmen are finally isolated in a women's dorm. but they are not finished. >> the gunshots continued, and this made us run to the fence and get away out from the school. >> reporter: it would take all day before the siege was over. the four gunmen dead. and the magnitude of this attack finally clear. 147 dead, nearly 100 wounded, and the nearly 500 survivors traumatized beyond words. universities in kenya were warned just last week they were targets for al shabab. the group was also behind the 2013 attack on the west gate shopping mall in nairobi. a four-day siege that left 67 people dead. >> as you point out, martha, they were behind that mall attack in kenya, as well. how much do authorities make of their recent threats even naming the mall of america? >> reporter: well, they are concerned, david. that threat was made in a video from al shabab posted online in february, specifically calling for an attack on that massive mall in minnesota. and david, remember that al shabab has recruited some 20 somali-americans to fight with al shabab in somalia. one of them became the first known american suicide bomber, david. >> all right, martha raddatz live in washington tonight. martha, thank you. now, to that historic deal with iran. tonight, has the u.s. and its allies successfully blocked iran from making a nuclear bomb, at least for now? iran tonight agreeing to nuclear inspections for 20 years, and keep in mind, the u.s. has not had diplomatic relations from with iran since the hostage crisis in 1979. president bush once declaring iran part of the axis of evil. tonight, president obama saying this deal is a matter of war and peace. abc's chief foreign correspondent terry moran in switzerland on what america gets out of this deal and what iran gets in return. >> reporter: president obama in the rose garden, two days after the deadline passed, finally hailing the deal done. >> today, the united states, together with our allies and partners, has reached an historic understanding with iran. >> reporter: so, what did the u.s. get? the breakout time. how long it would take iran to build one bomb is increased from just two to three months now to a year. major iranian nuclear sites will be redesigned for civilian purposes only. and a strict regime of monitoring and inspections will last for at least 20 years. and what does iran get? sanctions relief, phased in over time. this was iran's main goal. also, iran will still be able to research and develop advanced nuclear technology. and iran will keep making non weapons-grade uranium. critics in congress, ready to kill the deal. >> this deal is going to threaten america's national security interest and is going to lead to a nuclear arms race in the most volatile region in the world. >> reporter: but a weary secretary of state kerry, sharply rejecting the idea he got taken to the cleaners. did iran win here? >> not -- not -- no. those people who criticize it like that, they don't have an alternative. this is the safest, best way to make the world safer by reducing the ability of iran to be able to have a nuclear weapon. >> reporter: the deal announced today was very general, really just a framework agreement. there's months of hard negotiations ahead. and when i asked secretary kerry if the whole thing could still fall apart in those months, he said, "of course." david? >> terry moran with secretary kerry tonight in switzerland. terry, thank you. and this evening, the breaking headline back here at home from the fbi. two young american women now under arrest. authorities say they were studying the boston bombings, plotting another attack here in the u.s. abc's senior justice correspondent pierre thomas tonight. >> reporter: two u.s. women, one-time roommates from queens, new york, accused of being covert supporters of two of america's arch enemies, isis and al qaeda's deadly affiliate in yemen. noelle velentzas, 28, and asia siddiqui, age 31, in federal court today. their alleged plan? to detonate a bomb in a massive terrorist attack here in the u.s. both suspects had been allegedly studying bomb-making online, including the pressure cooker explosive used in the boston marathon attacks. authorities found four propane tanks they say siddiqui planned to turn into a deadly explosive. the other suspect had allegedly been inspired by isis videos like this showing radicals beheading victims. >> from the planning the purchase of the equipment from their online activities every indication is that they fully intended to carry out a bombing. >> reporter: neighbors were shocked. >> it's incredible. i can't believe it. >> reporter: but both women had allegedly been meeting with fbi undercover operatives who had them under surveillance for months. chillingly, one of the women allegedly said, there was no need to go overseas to join isis when there were ways of attacking here at home in what she called the last war. the big war. armageddon. >> and pie pierre thomas here with us in new york. and word of another arrest of an american today? >> reporter: a suspect arrested in pakistan. he's accused of plotting to kill soldiers in afghanistan. he's american. a huge asset for al qaeda. >> all right, pierre thomas, always great to have you with us here in new york. pierre, thank you. tonight, there is a major development in that tragedy in the alps. investigators now revealing what they have learned about that co-pilot. the chilling internet searches they found on his computer. searching suicide and cockpit doors. abc's alex marquardt from germany. >> reporter: tonight, there's disturbing new evidence that andreas lubitz may have opinion planning his deadly flight for days. german investigators revealing a search of the co-pilot's tablet computer shows that in the week before the crash, he had researched medical treatments, suicide methods and information on cockpit door security. he would have known that when the captain tried to re-enter the cockpit by punching a code into a key pad, he could flip a switch and lock him out. and that the steel reinforced door was designed to withstand even a blast from a grenade. his breathing remaining normal even as the pilot screamed, "for god's sake, open the door," and tried to break it down. today on the mountain, recovery workers unearthing another piece of the tragic puzzle. the plane's second black box, the flight data recorder buried and charred, but prosecutors say they're still hopeful it will yield crucial information on what exactly happened in that cockpit in those final moments. and david, french officials said today that a fighter jet that was scrambled that day saw the whole tragedy unfold. the fighter pilot watching as the germanwings plan slammed into the mountain. david? >> all right, thank you, alex. and back here at home this evening and to some frightening moments in the skies over seattle. two separate planes struck by lightning as they tried to land during severe weather. abc's david kerley, who covers aviation for us, with the images tonight. >> reporter: they are striking pictures. not just one, but two jets hit by lightning over seattle. last night's storm around the airport hit the jets as they were preparing to land. >> i was kind of in shock. i was just thinking about how amazing it was to see. >> reporter: these dramatic pictures show the jets are designed to take a lightning strike. testing in a lab -- these boeing engineers make sure the electricity flow is outside the jetliner, never entering the cabin. so, here is my chance to actually make lightning. whoa! that is amazing. and the thickness of the materials, struck as well. you see that it scratched the aluminum but didn't actually go through. >> that is indicative of a once in a lifetime level that a plane would occur. we hit it pretty hard. >> reporter: it's unclear if the passengers last night even knew their jets were actually hit by lightning bolts. david kerley, abc news, new york. >> the pictures from the northwest. thanks david. and there's more severe weather in other parts of the country. even a tornado warning up for a time today. so, let's get right to meteorologist rob marciano, tracking this for us. rob, it's a mess. >> reporter: it is. and the radar is filling in across the storm zone. the next 36 hours are going to be on the rough side. the greatest threat across the southern missouri area, through the boot heel then this front pushes off to the south. we could see tornadoes tonight, certainly large hail and strong winds. same deal tomorrow. monroe, louisiana, in through nashville. the heavy rains we spoke of, across the storm zone, could see two to four inches over the very full ohio river. some of that heavy rain also pushes into the northeast by tomorrow night up through d.c. new york and philly heavy rain into saturday morning. >> tough driving in the days ahead. rob, thank you. we turn now to that urgent manhunt for an escaped killer who walked out of jail in illinois. police saying he attacked a correctional officer and stole his uniform. they now believe someone is helping him avoid capture. investigators now looking at his list of visitors while in that jail. now, to millionaire murder suspect robert durst tonight. that unforgettable image durst smiling for the cameras as he left the courtroom in new orleans. durst back in court today. he showed up, but the fbi witnesses his team had subpoenaed did not. abc's matt gutman is there. >> reporter: as robert durst was bundled out of court, his defense team on the offense. >> it sounds like to me they're trying to hide the ball. >> reporter: the millionaire's attorneys calling two fbi agents and a state trooper they had subpoenaed as witnesses. but the three never showed up. the defense saying the agents only got a search warrant for durst's marriott hotel room after they found his gun and marijuana. the judge saying the fbi agents could be held in contempt of court for their failure to appear. the millionaire has been investigated in three deaths. as seen in the hbo docudrama, "the jinx," which concluded with this apparent confession. >> killed them all, of course. >> his arrest was the based on that program. not on evidence. >> reporter: part of that film also based on the investigation by former west chester d.a. jeanine pirro into the disappearance of durst's first wife. >> son of a [ bleep ]. >> reporter: deguerin also wanted her to testify, but she, too, was a no-show. matt gutman, abc news, new orleans. >> to be continued. matt, thank you. and now, to new jersey senator bob menendez tonight, under fire leaving court today accused of trading political influence for luxury vacations and private planes. tonight, menendez digging in, saying he's innocent. here's abc's david wright. >> reporter: senator bob menendez denial today outside federal court in newark. >> these allegations are false, and i am confident they will be proven false. >> reporter: the new jersey democrat is pleading not guilty to 14 counts of bribery, corruption and fraud. stemming from his relationship with this man, dr. salomon melgen, a florida eye doctor. prosecutors say the doctor gave the senator more than a dozen free flights on his private jets. frequent use of the doctor's fully staffed luxury caribbean villa in a gated community with three golf courses. free romantic getaways including one with a girlfriend to paris, putting them up in this five-star hotel. and hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign donations. in exchange, menendez allegedly used his influence to help the doctor's foreign girlfriends with their visa problems. to protect a multi-million dollar contract for a company the doctor owns in the dominican republic. and to push medicare to drop its investigation into $9 million the doctor overcharged them. menendez insists he was just helping a friend. david wright, abc news, newark. >> david, thank you. we move onto indiana now, the so-called fix to that hotly debated religious freedom law. state lawmakers approving changes to the law today. the amendment saying the new law is not a license to discriminate against gay men and women. the governor signing the law late today. and in arkansas the governor there signing changes to a similar bill after pressure from his own son to do so. we turn now to duke tonight. a student has admitted to hanging that noose on campus. the undergrad identified by fellow students. officials not revealing a name, saying the student is no longer on campus and could now face criminal charges. and tonight here, we remember a famous reverend here in america who began in the parking lot of a california drive-in. reverend robert schuller began his ministry 60 years ago, from this altar he built on the roof of the concession stand at a drive-in off the santa ana freeway outside los angeles. on sunday mornings, he could rent the space for $10. his motto, come as you are in the family car. >> the solution is not to look at the problem, but to look at the possibilities. >> reporter: in 1970 schuller began hosting the weekly program "hour of power," reaching 20 million across 180 countries. he famously built the crystal cathedral, one of this country's first megachurches. 10,000 panes of glass. the church filing for bankruptcy five years ago, but schuller had his own message. >> never look at what you have lost. never. look at what you have left. >> reverend schuller, remembered tonight. there is still much more ahead on "world news tonight" this thursday. the wrong-way crash, head-on, into a school bus. the moment caught on camera, dozens of children on board. the bus driver with nowhere to go. the number one grocery store in america. any guesses tonight? who is at the top of the list? it's coming up. and take a look at this. the rough ride on the racetrack. the jockey flying head over heels here. but there are big questions tonight about what really happened. i'm caridee. i've had moderate to severe plaque psoriasis most my life. but that hasn't stopped me from modeling. my doctor told me about stelara®. it helps keep my skin clearer. with only 4 doses a year after 2 starter doses... ... stelara® helps me be in season. stelara® may lower your ability to fight infections and increase your risk of infections. some serious infections require hospitalization. before starting stelara®... ...your doctor should test for tuberculosis. stelara® may increase your risk of cancer. always tell your doctor if you have any sign of 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driver. each year, wrong-way crashes kill more than 1,000 people, often head-on, the accidents usually more deadly than any other kind of crash. and now, states are fighting back. from simple lights on signs in texas, to high-tech reflectors in arizona. if you see those lights coming at you, is there anything you can do? >> stay out of the fast lane. stay out of the car pool lane. stay in the middle lane. at least it gives you the ability to move to the left or right. >> reporter: advice for all drivers to keep in mind -- >> you're on the wrong side of the highway! >> reporter: and avoid steering into trouble. and the frightening thing is, that there's not a lot you can do when one of these drivers is headed your way. but tonight, police are praising that bus driver, saying she saw that wrong-way suv, stopped this bus immediately and she went to check on these kids. really quick thinking on her part. >> checked on the kids right away. cecilia, thank you. been great watching you on saturday nights. when we come back here tonight, 66 days lost at sea, off the coast of north carolina, and the rescue playing out at this hour. also tonight, the best supermarket in america? any guesses? and the horse race, this jockey won't soon forget it. the jump that had him flying head over heels. but questions about what really happened here. we're looking for above-normal snowfall. a major storm system. widespread travel problems going to be a concern, all throughout the day. the promise of the cloud is that every individual and organization has unlimited access to information, at any time, no matter where they are. weather affects us all. the microsoft cloud gives our team the power to instantly deliver critical information to people whenever they need it. here at accuweather we get up to 10 billion data requests every day, from over 200 countries and in 100 different languages. the microsoft cloud allows us to scale up so we can handle that volume. i remember a woman and she 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lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. ask your doctor if... ...viagra is right for you. look! this is the new asian inspired broth bowl from panera bread. that noise! panera broth bowls should be slurped with gusto! to explore further order online or visit your neighborhood panera bread. ufferers. one tried the newest allergy spray which could take several days to feel the full effect of relief. the other took claritin-d which starts to work on allergies with nasal congestion in 30 minutes. the moral? nothing works faster than claritin-d. to the index tonight. the sailor rescued after this -- lost 66 days at sea. his capsized boat found by a tanker today, 200 miles east of cape hatteras, north carolina. his family had reported him missing back in january. he survived by catching fish. and the best supermarket in america? well wegman's, thanks to high marks for produce, meat and baked goods. publix, based in the south, and trader joe's, rounding out the top three. proud wegman's boy years ago. and what you really happened to this jockey in england tonight? in the lead when suddenly, watch this. he somersaults off his horse over that fence. unbelievable. but tonight, some asking, did he jump? perhaps losing his nerve at the last second. miraculously, he was not hurt. and when we come back here tonight, you've got to see this. make way for brutus. this dog is fighting back tonight on all fours because so many of you gave him a second chance. we'll be right back. nexium® 24hr. it's the purple pill the #1 prescribed acid blocking brand available without a prescription for frequent heartburn. get complete protection. nexium level protection™ thank you for being a sailor, and my daddy. thank you mom, for protecting my future. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are thankful for many things. the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. our world-class service earned usaa the top spot in a study of the most recommended large companies in america. if you're current or former military or their family, see if you're eligible to get an auto insurance quote. you get sick you can't breathe through your nose... suddenly... you're a mouthbreather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than cold medicines alone so you can breathe and sleep shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. man when i got shingles it was something awful. it was like being blindsided by some linebacker. you don't see it coming. boom! if you've had chicken pox that shingles virus is already inside of you. it ain't pretty when it comes out. now i'm not telling you this so that you'll feel sorry for me. i'm just here to tell you that one out of three people are gonna end up getting shingles. i was one of 'em. so please go talk to your doctor or pharmacist. finally tonight here, so many pets in need of rescuing in this country. tonight, brutus, his new family and his new legs. here's abc's steve osunsami. >> good boy, good boy. >> reporter: every dog has its day, and this is brutus's. only the second dog in history to get a new chance at life with the help of four prosthetic limbs. >> usually it takes him a little bit, just to get used to being back in them. come on, let's get up. >> reporter: laura aquillina is adopting him, saying she loves him to pieces. the 2-year-old rottweiler was rescued from a heartless backyard breeder who allowed frostbite to claim his paws. >> before he had his prosthetics, brutus couldn't walk outside, really at all. he would have been put down. >> reporter: volunteers got friends on social media to rally, raising more than $12,000 for surgery and to hire the contractor who specializes in animal prosthetics. >> our basis concept is, if dogs are built with four legs, let's make sure they have four legs. >> yeah! >> reporter: so someday soon, he might be able to take long walks or fetch a ball and all it took was a little goodness from everyday people. steve osunsami, abc news, new york. >> one step at a time there. we love brutus. thank you for watching on a thursday night. i'm david muir. we hope to see y a collapse of this house an occupant barely made it out. >> a chapter of the vietnam war. the orphans who started lives here in the bay area, 40 years ago. >> we begin with a final salute to a fallen police officer who 's life ended too soon. >> the community, the bay area, and police officers everywhere welling up with emotion. he was years old and a 14 year veteran of the police department. here you can see the hearse carrying the funeral home this morning arriving at the s.a.p.center. and a somber procession that lasted nearly 45 minutes. >> you can see uniformed officers from around the state and country, thousands of them filing into his funeral. every officer from the police department was cleared to attend. he was remembered as a loving father who enjoyed the martial arts. >> this is a reminder safety comes at a supreme price. and that should be remembered. >>

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20150403

today from president obama could be so significant. >> today, the united states, together with our allies and partners, has reached an historic understanding with iran, which if fully implemented, will prevent it from obtaining a nuclear weapon. >> pelley: but that is a big if. this is a detailed framework for future negotiations, not a done deal. it was reached in lausanne switzerland by iran, the u.s., britain, france, germany russia, and china. and a source who was there tells us that secretary of state kerry and iranian foreign minister mohammad zarif haggled all night. this was taken at 9:30 p.m., but by 5:30 a.m., w're told, they were alone in their shirtsleeves, still editing the deal. here are the major points: iran would reduce its uranium- enriching centrifuges from 19,000 to 6,000 for 10 years. it would not enrich any uranium to weapons-grade. iran would dismantle a plutonium reactor, which is another path to a bomb. and iran would open all of its nuclear facilities to regular united nations inspections. after compliance is certified by the u.n., crippling economic sanctions against iran would be rolled back. margaret brennan just sat down with the man who closed the deal. >> reporter: iran says none of their nuclear facilities are going to shut down. that sounds like a political win for iran's supreme leader. how do you defend that in front of congress? >> look, they'll have their narrative and we will have ours. the important thing is look at the facts. look at the access we will have to their facilities, the tracking of their uranium, the oversight of their promises that they have made with respect to this, the accountability we will have. >> reporter: but iran has been clashing with inspectors for years. >> i know -- >> reporter: how can you know they won't cheat? >> well, margaret, because we have a whole new system that we designed and that they accepted and worked on to absolutely answer that question so that we now have a guaranteed access. if they don't provide it, the sanctions come back. >> reporter: will new sanctions from congress torpedo this? >> new sanctions now would clearly be unnecessary given what we've been able to achieve, and, yes, it would have a profoundly negative impact on this -- >> reporter: how do you convince congress not to do that? >> it would be highly irresponsible to simply break this apart by now stepping into the middle when the measure of this agreement, i believe, can stand the test of scrutiny. >> reporter: do you think that this deal is basically a long- term bet on the future of iran? i mean, what does iran look like at the end of 10 or 15 years? >> no, we're not betting. we're not betting. there's no betting here. let me tell you something, if they don't earn the world's confidence, then we have every option available then that is available to us today. we have given up nothing. >> reporter: secretary kerry also told me he has no idea if he can turn this framework into a signed accord with iran during another three months of talks, but he said getting this far is a great sign. >> pelley: great interview margaret. thanks very much. late today, president obama phoned the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu to brief him on the tentative deal. and members of congress will want a say in this, too. nancy cordes is on capitol hill. >> the terms announced today are not as bad as i had feared. they're much worse. >> reporter: the agreement did not impress republicans like tom cotton of arkansas, who says iran can't be trusted. what kind of framework would you have been happy with? the only acceptable deal would be iran's nuclear disarmament. even if iran followed the terms of the deal, almost every term has a 10- to 15-year sunset. >> reporter: new york republican peter king argued a sanction- free iran would have more power to export terror. >> i am very concerned that iran is going to come out of this stronger than they were before and we will have lost our leverage. >> reporter: the white house insists this is an international agreement that is not subject to congressional approval. but lawmakers from both sides say congress voted to impose sanctions and should have a say in any deal that lifts them. a bill gaining steam in the senate would require congressional review of a nuclear deal if one is reached by june 30. its author is tennessee's bob corker, the powerful chair of the senate foreign relations committee. in a measured statement today he said, "it is important that we wait to see the specific details" of the agreement. president obama promised congress would be fully briefed. >> if congress kills this deal not based on expert analysis and without offering any reasonable alternative, then it's the united states that will be blamed for the failure of diplomacy. >> reporter: several democrats said today they were encouraged by the agreement, scott, and that it is actually broader in scope than they expected. >> pelley: nancy cordes on capitol hill. nancy, thank you. in kenya, islamic militants stormed a college and targeted christian students. 13 hours later, at least 147 people are dead. kenya is fighting a terrorist group called al-shabaab based next door in somalia. and debora patta is on the story. >> reporter: students were jolted awake by the sound of gunfire as the heavily armed gunmen shot their way past the university's main gate and stormed the campus dormitories. eyewitnesses say the gunmen fired indiscriminately at first before beginning a deadly march from room to room, demanding to know if those inside were muslim or christian. police said some christians were shot on the spot. terrified students tried to escape. >> we were hearing and seeing the gunshots, but we were not seeing the people themselves the people who are shooting at us. >> reporter: some students were taken hostage but it is unclear how many, and many remain unaccounted for, possibly trapped inside college buildings. at least 65 were rushed to the hospital, mostly with gunshot wounds. the somali-based militant group al-shabaab has claimed responsibility for the attack. the university in garissa is only 90 miles from the somali border. al-shabaab's islamic extremists have struck kenya before. one of the worst attacks was in 2013 when militants rampaged through the upscale west gate shopping mall. trapped shoppers were asked to recite verses from the koran. anyone who couldn't was executed. the attack left 67 dead. tonight, the kenyan government named mohamed kuno, a high- ranking al-shabaab official, as the mastermind of the university attack. it placed a bounty of $217,000 on him. garissa university did send letters to the students warning of a possible attack, but it appears no additional security measures were taken. there were only the regular university guards manning the gates, and campus life continued as normal. >> pelley: debora patta reporting for us from south africa tonight. debora, thank you. two new york city women were arrested today accused of plotting an attack similar to the boston marathon bombing, and jeff pegues is following this. >> reporter: 28-year-old noelle velentzas and 31-year-old asia saddiqui are former roommates from this neighborhood in queens, new york, who prosecutors say had an obsession with building bombs. according to law enforcement officials, they had researched previous attacks in the united states-- the 1993 world trade center bombing, and the 1995 oklahoma city bombing. those, officials say, they had also expressed an interest in using pressure cookers to make bombs like those used in the 2013 boston marathon bombing. according to court documents, in november of last year, velentzas told an undercover informant that it would be useful to learn how to "valet" a car and how to "cook a lot of food," apparent coded references to car bombs. the court papers also say the women had copies of the anarchist cookbook, which details how to make explosives and also referred to an article from the jihadist "inspire" magazine titled, "car bombs inside america." prosecutors allege saddiqui had a close relationship with samir kahn in queens. he was an american who became a top member of al qaeda in the arabian peninsula when he moved from queens to yemen. he and american-born cleric anwar al-awlaki founded "inspire" magazine. both were killed in a drone strike in 2011. six years ago, investigators believe saddiqui wrote a poem which was published in a magazine called "jihad recollections." "there is no excuse to sit back and wait," she wrote, "for the skies rain martyrdom." authorities became alarmed when the women obtained several canisters of propane gas, but police say that there was no imminent threat. scott, a man who identified himself as the women's imam says they have been falsely accused. >> pelley: jeff pegues in our washington newsroom. jeff, thank you. prosecutors revealed today that the co-pilot in the germanwings crash had searched online for information on suicide and cockpit door security. andreas lubitz is believed to have locked the captain out of the cockpit and crashed the jet into the alps at nearly 450 miles an hour. 150 were killed. today, searchers found the plane's flight data recorder buried eight inches underground. if you have any doubt about the need for california's new water restrictions, well, have a look at this. lake orville, california, in july 2011, and on the right, that's today. it's almost 70% dry. nearly all of the state is in severe drought. the areas in red are extremely dry, those in brown are exceptionally dry. john blackstone says the first thing californians may have to lose is their lawns. >> reporter: in los angeles, a company called turf terminators is busy tearing out lawns and replacing them with gravel and drought-resistant plants. it's paid for by a local government program that rebates $3 for every square foot of grass that's gone. today, marise freitas said good- bye to her thirsty lawn. >> we're essentially in a desert, and people are maintaining yards like we live in, you know, the tropics and it's just-- it's a silly waste of water. >> reporter: the mandatory 25% reduction in water use for californians means more and more yards will look like this. ryan nivakoff is c.e.o. of turf terminators. >> we're on a wave of a new era of landscaping in southern california, and hopefully california in general. >> reporter: on average, 60% of domestic water use goes to outdoor irrigation, so that's the obvious place to make the 25% reduction. in santa cruz, those who use too much water are sent to water school to learn better habits, that and hefty fines from $200 to several thousands dollars reduced water usage by 25% in the city last year. to help people cope with cuts, the sewage treatment plant at dublin san ramon now provides recycled water for use in outdoor irrigation. anyone with a gallon tank or more can come and fill up with free water. you don't want to drink it, but it's fine for the garden. >> it's fine for the garden, right. >> reporter: dan gallagher is operations manager for the water district. >> and we rely on mother nature to bring us rain and snow, and it doesn't happen, we have to have a way to take care of the people that are already here. >> reporter: the recycled water from the sewage treatment plant is also used to keep local parks green. this district uses electronic water meters that tell them minute by minute who is using too much water. scott, that helped cut water use here by 25% last year. >> pelley: john blackstone covering the drought for us tonight. john, thank you. >> the drought intensified with another month of record warmth. los angeles had the warmest march in 84 years. average-- 68 degrees. las vegas averaged about 67. and yakima, washington, 50. late today, indiana governor mike pence took a step to cool things off in his state when he signed an amended religious freedom law. critics had claimed that the original allowed businesses to deny service to gays. the new version bars discrimination based on race religion, or sexual orientation. also today, arkansas' governor asa hutchinson signed a re-write of his state's religious freedom act after it faced similar pressure from businesses including walmart. the new law closely mirrors a 1993 federal law. robert durst, the millionaire accused of murder, was back in court but where were the f.b.i. agents who arrested him? and folks landing in seattle got quite a jolt when the cbs evening news continues. which could take several days to feel the full effect of relief. the other took claritin-d which starts to work on allergies with nasal congestion in 30 minutes. the moral? nothing works faster than claritin-d. look! this is the new asian inspired broth bowl from panera bread. that noise! panera broth bowls should be slurped with gusto! to explore further order online or visit your neighborhood panera bread. [announcer:] what if one stalk of broccoli could protect you from cancer? what if one push up could prevent heart disease? [man grunts] one wishful thinking, right? but there is one step you can take to help prevent another serious disease- pneumococcal pneumonia. one dose of the prevnar 13® vaccine can help protect you ... from pneumococcal pneumonia, an illness that can cause coughing, chest pain difficulty breathing and may even put you in the hospital. prevnar 13 ® is used in adults 50 and older to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13 ® if you've had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients if you have a weakened immune system, you may have a lower response to the vaccine. common side effects were pain, redness, or swelling at the injection site. limited arm movement, fatigue, head ache muscle or joint pain less appetite, chills, or rash. even if you've already been vaccinated with another pneumonia vaccine, prevnar 13® may help provide additional protection. get this one done. ask your healthcare professional about prevnar 13® today. >> pelley: the eccentric millionaire robert durst was back in court today in new w orleans where he faces a weapons charge for a gun that was found when he was arrested in connection with a los angeles murder.lo durst appeared to confess toar that killing, and at least two others, in an hbo documentary. erin moriarty of "48 hours" is m following the case for us. erin. u >> reporter: well, scott, today was just supposed to be an ordinary preliminary hearingng but when durst's attorneys came in and asked for those stateho charges to be dropped, it became an all-out legal battle. robert durst's arrest last month at a hotel in new orleans is to prosecutors cut and dry. f.b.i. agents suspecting that durst was about to leave the country made their move first, but that's not how defense attorney dick deguerin sees it. >> it was illegal. it was not proper. they approached bob in the lobby of the marriott hotel, and he was under arrest from that point on. >> reporter: the defense describes this timeline-- on march 14, at 3:00 in the afternoon, the f.b.i. detained durst. at 6:00 p.m., agents began to search his room. a .38-caliber gun in a coat hanging in his closet and marijuana in his luggage was seized. yet, it was only around 2:00 the next morning that authorities applied for a search warrant for the hotel room. not only that, the defense accused state police of intentionally misleading a judge on an application for an arrest warrant, making it appear the gun and marijuana were discovered after a valid search warrant was in hand. in court today, assistant district attorney mark burton insisted the arrest was valid, but when attorneys for durst called the f.b.i. agents and state investigator to the stand, no one appeared. the magistrate judge postponed the hearing and ordered the u.s. attorney's office to either produce the witnesses or be in contempt.t burton wouldn't comment, but deguerin did. >> we want to be in court. we want to have witnesses. we want to cross examine witnesses. t i said to the court, "it sounds like to me they're trying to hide the ball." >> reporter: if you're wondering why durst's attorneys are taking these state charges so seriously, it's because if durst is convicted on these weapon charges, he could be sent to prison for 15 years, and when you're nearly 72 years old, that could be a life sentence.be scott. >> pelley: erin moriarty of "48 hours." erin, thank you very much. a river of mud plows through a town in the middle of dry season when we come back. there's nothing more romantic than a spontaneous moment. so why pause to take a pill? and why stop what you're doing to find a bathroom? with cialis for daily use, you don't have to plan around either. it's the only daily tablet approved to treat erectile dysfunction so you can be ready anytime the moment is right. plus cialis treats the frustrating urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision or any symptoms of an allergic reaction stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. why pause the moment? ask your doctor about cialis for daily use. for a free 30-tablet trial go to cialis.com thank you for being a sailor, and my daddy. thank you mom, for protecting my future. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are thankful for many things. the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. our world-class service earned usaa the top spot in a study of the most recommended large companies in america. if you're current or former military or their family, see if you're eligible to get an auto insurance quote. bring us your aching and sleep deprived. bring us those who want to feel well rested. aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid... plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. be a morning person again with aleve pm. apples fall, but the apples of your cheeks don't have to. defy gravity. juvéderm voluma® is the only fda-approved injectable gel to instantly add volume to your cheek area. as you age, cheeks can lose volume. voluma adds volume creating contour and lift for a more youthful profile. for up to two years. temporary side effects include tenderness, swelling, firmness lumps, bumps, bruising, pain redness, discoloration and itching. ask your doctor. juvéderm voluma®. defy gravity. >> pelley: the heaviest rain inin 80 years is triggering deadly mudslides in south america. this is southern peru near chile. a river of mud ran through town yesterday with the power to wash away cars. at least two dozen have died in what's supposed to be the driest time of year. it was stormy in seattle lasty i night. lots of lightning and a passenger jet was struck as it came in for a landing.at have another look at that. the bolt seems to go right through the plane.l it landed safely. the f.a.a. says just about every plane gets hit about once a year. the way advertising executive rudolph perz told it, the ideato just popped into his head. a little boy popping out of a roll of dough. and that is how the pillsbury doughboy was born a half century ago. ( laughing ) >> pelley: rudolph perz died yesterday. he was 89. the reverend robert schuller died today. the cause was cancer of the esophagus. schuller was once a sunday tvun fixture preaching possibilityty thinking on his "hour of power"ho from the crystal cathedral. then came a family feud and bankruptcy, and the cathedralth was sold to the catholic church. robert schuller was 88. a clergyman is still transforming his city, and we'll have his story next. incredible! i've been claritin clear for ten days. when your allergy symptoms start, doctors recommend taking one claritin every day of your allergy season for continuous relief. with powerful 24-hour, non-drowsy claritin live claritin clear. every day. people with type 2 diabetes come from all walks of life. if you have high blood sugar ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar, kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections changes in urination and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life♪ ♪yeah, you do the walk of life♪ need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga. and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. >> pelley: in the musical "godspell" jesus sings ofsp building a beautiful city. as christians observe holy week, special correspondent james brown has the story of one preacher who is doing just that. >> they don't come-- hey, love you, buddy. >> reporter: this happens frequently here, too. >> oh, all the time. >> reporter: when bishop donald hilliard walked down the mainh street of perth amboy, newhe lov jersey, he can feel the love of a community he has served for more than 30 years. he has helped transform the city, starting with this foreclosed adult movie theater which is now his church. ♪ ♪ ♪ hilliard's cathedral international church has grown from 100 members in the 80s, to more than 5,000 today. and a downtown that was once filled with liquor stores and abandoned buildings is now very different. >> no one else is doing anything.hi people were moving up on out of a perth amboy, not in. we were the number one investor in perth amboy in that time period. >> reporter: but it's not justng buildings he's focused on. >> i believe that where therehe are god's people that the community should be transformed right along with the people's souls. happy father's day to every father.ay >> reporter: hilliard has focused on first changing the lives of the men in the community. kevin smallwood was a drug addict.wa now he's an entrepreneur. >> i invited bishop over to my house and cooked him some fishe one afternoon, one sundaye afternoon, after church.af he said, "kevin, this fish is so good, you could market it." c within six months after that i opened my first restaurant. >> reporter: state assembly man john wisniewski says hilliard and his church have been key to the steady growth of the city over the last two decades. >> his ministry has been remarkable in that it is hands on. he's got the calluses on his hands to show the difference that he's made in this community. >> i want to leave a legacy that says, "he tried to help me. he made a way for me. he made space for me and opened up a door for me so i could go s in that door." ♪ ♪ ♪ >> reporter: and he says he intends to open many new doors for years to come. james brown, cbs news, perth amboy, new jersey. >> pelley: amen. that's the cbs evening news for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org [ bagpipes ] remembering their colleague and beloved brother. >> mike approached everything in like with a go big or go home attitude. >> reporter: today thousands of law enforcement from all over the state and country gathered to honor san jose police officer michael johnson. >> he was known for his honor and courage on and off the job. in solemn tribute his family, friends and the public he served gave their final farewell. >> good evening, i'm i'm veronica de la cruz. >> i'm allen martin. a difficult day for the san jose police department. but there was an outpouring of support. we are going to begin our coverage with len ramirez and the tributes to a fallen hero. len. >> reporter: allen, for sure, an outpouring of support. officers came from throughout the country and the people of san jose came out of their homes, their offices and schools to pay tribute to the fallen officers michael johnson. [ taps ] ♪[ music ]♪ >> reporter: nine days after he was gunned down while answering the call of duty, officer michael johnson was given a final farewell by his sisters and brothers in law enforcement. ♪[ music ]♪ ♪ i once was lost but now i'm found ♪ >> reporter: it was an emotionally charged ceremony inside the darkened s.a.p. center where thousands came from as far away as new york to pay tribute to johnson. >> you're forever stitched to us, bonded to us, and now your heart will be through ours. >> reporter: officer johnson was ambushed on march 24 as he arrived on the scene of a despondent man armed with a rifle. >> feel like i just got hit with a sledgehammer.

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Transcripts For KNTV NBC Nightly News 20150403

new york, this is "nbc nightly news." reporting tonight, lester holt. good evening. few things have rattled the world quite like the prospect of iran developing a nuclear weapon, which is why all eyes this week have been glued on a small city in switzerland where today nearly round-the-clock negotiations with iran and how to curb its nuclear program finally produced the framework of a deal. one that president obama quickly proclaimed would ensure iran will never be able to develop the bomb. but then there's the issue of what iran gets in return and whether any deal will hold. our team has it covered. we begin with andrea mitchell in lausanne. andrea. >> reporter: good evening, lester. it's been 18 months of tough negotiations ending with an all-nighter that still left several key issues unresolved. but tonight the united states could be entering a new era in its relationship with iran. and president obama is telling critics this will make our world safer. after marathon talks that almost broke down, an agreement far more specific than many had expected. the weary negotiators set off to sell it back home as president obama launched what will be a tough campaign. >> if iran cheats, the world will know it. if we see something suspicious, we will inspect it. iran's past efforts to weaponize its program will be addressed. >> reporter: it requires iran not to enrich uranium to weapons grade for 15 years. to reduce its number of operating nuclear centrifuges from 19,000 to just over 5,000. to increase the time it would take to make a bomb from a few months to a year. and to convert its underground plutonium reactor to peaceful research. u.n. inspectors will have full access to all of iran's nuclear facilities. and iran gets relief from sanctions only if it meets its commitments. iran's foreign minister javad zarif claimed victory on sanctions. >> when we complete our measures, there will be no sanctions against the islamic republic of iran. >> reporter: they couldn't agree on when they would be lifted. and zarif immediately rejected a state department fact sheet tweeting, there is no need to spin using fact sheets so early on. zarif and kerry also couldn't agree on a joint statement. if you couldn't agree on standing up together and announcing together exactly what you've agreed on here, what makes you think that in the next three months you're going to actually come to an agreement? >> because there's a great deal of difference for them between what happens now and where this goes and what can happen when you have a final signature. >> reporter: you think you can get a deal by june? >> i'm not promising anything. nor is the president. what we've done is open up the opportunity. >> reporter: but first they'll have to persuade congress and iran's skeptical neighbors. andrea mitchell, nbc news, lausanne. >> reporter: this is ann curry. the u.s. and iran are trumpeting today's deal, but others are deeply skeptical. israel called it a historic mistake. prime minister netanyahu tweeting, any deal must significantly roll back iran's nuclear capabilities and stop its terrorism and aggression. and israel has surprising company. much of the arab world agrees iran with its regional and nuclear ambitions cannot be trusted. that includes another u.s. ally, saudi arabia. >> everybody wants a good deal that prevents iran from developing an atomic bomb. >> reporter: but the agreement was welcomed by many in iran. desperate to get out from under years of crippling economic sanctions. nbc's ali erusy in tehran. >> when the news of the deal reached tehran, some people took to their cars and went to the main squares in the city honking their horns and flashing v signs celebrating the news. >> reporter: iran's foreign minister speaking this evening after days of marathon negotiations fought again to reassure skeptics that iran's nuclear ambitions are strictly peaceful. >> we have decided to take steps for a period of time to assure anybody who had concern our program is exclusively peaceful, has always been and will always remain exclusively peaceful. >> reporter: and iran's foreign minister and his team are expected to be greeted with a hero's welcome when they return home tomorrow, lester. >> ann curry tonight. thank you, ann. another major story we're covering tonight, a massacre on a college campus in kenya. terrorists launched a horrifying attack that went on for hours. when it was over at least 147 people were dead, many injured. and a warning, some of these images are, frankly, quite hard to watch. our chief foreign correspondent richard engel has our report. >> reporter: the attack began before dawn. witnesses say masked gunmen entered the campus through the dormitory. students awoke to gunfire. most of the injured were students. so were the dead. survivors say the attackers separated christians from muslims. christians were shot, muslims freed. a student says he escaped by jumping out a window but hundreds of others were still trapped inside. >> for hours we could hear gunshots and explosions. >> reporter: garissa university college is in the northeast of kenya not far from the border with somalia. it took two hours for kenyan reinforcements to arrive. u.s. counterterrorism officials tell nbc news that once the kenyans did arrive, they were decisive, moving in and fighting. kenya's president took to the air waves to try to calm his nation. >> we continue to pray for a quick recovery of the injured. >> reporter: the somalia-based terror group al shabaab claimed responsibility almost immediately. the militant group carried out a very similar attack on a kenyan shopping mall in 2013. then, like today, with four gunmen. >> you have now competing terror groups in the world, so they have to show that they're relevant and they have to attack on a larger scale. >> reporter: the kenyan government accused this man, mohamed kuno, also known by other names. leader of elite al shabaab unit. this may be the deadliest attack on a university ever. and it appears to have been long-planned. over a week ago another kenyan university warned its students that al shabaab was plotting an attack. officials just didn't know where. lester. >> richard engel, thanks. a lot of fast moving developments tonight in the investigation into the co-pilot who officials say may have deliberately crashed that plane into the side of a mountain. disturbing internet searches found on his tablet computer as recovery crews discover the second black box at the crash scene. nbc's katy tur with that report. >> reporter: today, in the french alps among the scattered debris recovery workers say they've collected 40 smashed cell phones, larger pieces of wreckage and, finally, in a ravine the normally orange flight data recorder looking so badly burned it was black. still investigators say they are hopeful the data remains intact. inside the germanwings flight 9525 second black box french investigators hope to learn what co-pilot andreas lubitz was doing when he was alone in the cockpit. and whether just before the plane began its steep descent the autopilot had been manually changed from 38,000 feet to 100 feet as the tracking site flightradar24.com suggested last week. meanwhile, inside lubitz's dusseldorf apartment, german investigators hope to learn more about who he was and why he would allegedly crash the plane. and today they released some of what they found on lubitz's tablet computer. the user name, the personal correspondence and the entered search words carry the conclusion that the device was used by the co-pilot, said the prosecutor. from march 16 to march 23, the week leading up to the crash, he says lubitz studied medical treatments, various ways and possible methods of committing suicide and that he spent several minutes on cockpit doors and their security measures. german officials say they're going to look into cockpit security measures to see if they went a little too far after 9/11. they're also going to look into medical and psychological testing requirements for pilots to see where they can improve. katy tur, nbc news, germany. here in new york two women are under arrest accused of conspiring to commit a terrorist attack in the u.s. investigators believe they were inspired in part by isis. the feds say one of them had propane tanks and instructions to turn them into bombs. but one official adds there was no specific plot. under mounting pressure, lawmakers in both indiana and arkansas move late today to change their state's religious freedom laws, which critics have labeled anti-gay. nbc's gabe gutierrez explains. >> reporter: today, indiana republican lawmakers announced an unlikely compromise. >> religious rights and individual rights can co-exist in harmony together. >> reporter: the agreement follows intense national backlash when indiana passed a religious freedom law. the new language spells out the law does not authorize a provider to refuse to offer or provide services on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. why wasn't this language included in the first place? >> well, honestly, the language wasn't needed to clarify the statute legally. it is needed to clarify, the perception of it. and we fixed it. >> did you misinterpret the bill? >> absolutely not. >> reporter: lobbyist eric miller. one of the original law's backers remains defiant. >> you're going to jeopardize the freedom for a christian businessman or another faith to be forced into doing something against their religious beliefs. >> reporter: late today arkansas' governor signed a revised version of that state's religious freedom bill. >> this bill is bipartisan. it has received overwhelming support in both houses. it protects religious freedom. >> reporter: so did indiana's governor as the spotlight shifts to this weekend's final four. gabe gutierrez, nbc news, indianapolis. in february as movie goers were still flocking to see "american sniper" in theaters, the parents of the real chris kyle were in a texas courtroom watching the man who killed their son stand trial. now for the first time since the trial kyle's father is speaking out. i sat down with wayne kyle to talk about all that's happened. how are you and debbie doing? i mean, there's this movie and there's this book and all this, but we're talking about your son. how are you guys doing? >> surviving. it's been the toughest two-plus years of our life. >> reporter: what was it like to sit in the courtroom with him? >> it was horrible. i mean, gut wrenching. it's just one of those deals that you just want to jump over that railing and kill him with your bare hands. >> reporter: chris kyle left the navy in 2009. when we spoke three years ago, he told me he found purpose in helping other struggling vets. >> i want to try to figure out everything i can do possibly to help those guys. >> reporter: wayne kyle worried about his son. >> lester, i told him one time, i said, son, i worry more about you as a civilian than when you were with the teams. he said why is that. i said because you were fully trained, highly skilled in what you did. but i said there's no training to be a civilian. >> reporter: in 2013 kyle and his close friend chad littlefield were murdered on a texas gun range by eddie ray routh, a struggling vet they were trying to help. >> we the jury find the defendant, eddie ray routh, guilty. >> reporter: it was the "american sniper" trial. >> that was so, so wrong. i don't know how every branch of the media portrayed it. >> reporter: i said the words. i bought into it. it was the "american sniper" trial. >> we resent that because it was just then about the loss of chris. the loss of chris was no more of a tragedy than loss of chad littlefield. >> reporter: on the heels of the film's success and the trial, a texas congressman introduced a bill to posthumously honor kyle the medal of honor. >> if you knew chris, you would know he would never ever want that. he never saw himself as a hero. >> reporter: the kyles honor their son through a foundation that supports veterans causes. they are moved by the tributes of strangers for their son and are happy to have the trial behind them. >> we never had any peace to try to grieve, i guess, ourselves. but once they came back with that guilty verdict, it was like, okay, that chapter is closed, and there was a sense of relief. >> in february the man who killed kyle and chad littlefield was sentenced to life in prison without parole. still ahead for us here tonight, the loss of a legendary figure on television. also, tornado and severe thunderstorm warnings. the threat across a huge part of the country again. al roker will join us in a moment. and later, saying good-bye to the '60s. we're on set among the last cameras there with the cast and creator of "mad men." once again tonight a huge part of the country is on alert under threat of severe weather. we've already seen a tornado warning. al roker is in the studio with us. are we looking at a long night here? >> we certainly are, lester. on into tomorrow. this is an area that stretches all the way from pittsburgh into nashville. the storms are really just starting to get warmed up. we're watching this activity push on through. and as it does we're going to watch these systems push in and start to fire up. we expect to see strong storms. we already have a severe thunderstorm watch out from jackson all the way to nashville. we're watching that. ahead of this system we've got warm, moist air pushing in. and then behind it we've got colder air. and between those two that's where we're looking at the strong storms for tonight. we also expect to see heavy thunderstorms firing up. the enhanced risk stretching from springfield all the way to paducah overnight on into tomorrow it makes its way from nashville, jackson on into parts of the appalachians. heavy rain will be falling, lester. we have flash flood watches in effect. some areas picking up 3 to 5 inches of rain before it's all over. >> all right, al. thanks. we'll see you in the morning. the worst rainfall in decades has created epic flooding in chile sweeping away cars, trucks, buildings, even some entire towns right off the map. at least 24 people are reported dead, dozens of others missing. we're back in a moment to remember a man who millions tuned to every week for decades. the reverend robert schuller has died. the famed televangelist from southern california who built a megachurch known around the world. he passed away at age 88 after a battle with cancer. here's nbc's miguel almaguer. >> let us rejoice and be glad. >> reporter: from his california pulpit a global audience of 30 million. >> good morning. >> reporter: the reverend robert h. schuller was best known for the "hour of power," that influenced the generation of megachurch pastors. presidents came to worship, but it didn't start that way. when he was 4, guidance from his uncle. >> he put his hand on my head and said, robert, you're going to be a preacher when you grow up. and i said, oh, really? and i added it to my little prayer at night. >> reporter: in the 1950s he preached at a drive-in from the roof of a snack bar. >> this is the day that god has made. >> reporter: in the '80s his congregation grew. the $20 million crystal cathedral was the beacon of his popularity, but by the new century his ministry unraveled. the church filed for bankruptcy. >> life's not fair. >> reporter: diagnosed with cancer two years ago, tonight reverend schuller is remembered for his message. >> if you can dream it, you can do it. >> reporter: miguel almaguer, nbc news, los angeles. when we come back after the break, we were one of the last to visit the iconic set of "mad men." what we got to see before it signs off. it's the end of an era for a show that chronicles the end of an era. the final seven episodes of "mad men," the emmy-winning series that revolves around a 1960s advertising agency ends this sunday. we were among the last to visit the set before it wrapped up for production. nbc's kate snow caught up with the cast and creator for one last trip back in time. >> reporter: it was the first of its kind for basic cable. a show that created a sensation and drew rave reviews from the very first episode. >> who are you? >> i'm peggy olson, the new girl. >> welcome to the rainbow room. >> thank you for having me here. >> reporter: creator matthew weiner wrote the pilot 14 years ago. >> i sold the show at the beginning by saying this is a very sexy period in american history that's kind of been ignored. >> what you call love was invented by guys like me to sell nylons. >> is that right? >> reporter: winer introduced viewers to the glossy world of a new york city ad agency. >> i heard right away from people a really strong identification with a lot of the characters no matter how flawed they were. >> reporter: jon hamm was an un known when the show began. seven seasons took his character don draper from 1960 to 1969. >> armstrong is on the moon. >> reporter: fans obsessed over the show's meticulous detail from the tchotchkes on her dresser to the period stove in pete campbell's kitchen. and the lady bug wallpaper. we got to visit the set before shooting wrapped. >> if you opened up any of these folders, there's actual expense reports. >> reporter: for the actors nearing the end of a show that launched their careers is bittersweet. >> i know that i will see these people again, but i will never see peggy again. and i will never see don again. and i will never see joan and i will never see pete. and that to me is the sad part. that's what gets me. >> reporter: they bonded between scenes in this oasis they called base camp. we got a rare peek. >> people are texting you got to come down we're playing catch phrase right now. >> i never had that on a show ever. where people want to just hang out. >> reporter: why do you think "mad men" has done for television? >> that's for other people to say. that is really for other people to say. i hope it's had an affect on tv in the sense that it doesn't have any guns and it's a pretty small story and we managed to squeeze 92 hours of drama out of something that is pretty much, i mean, don's life is more exciting than yours and mine, but pretty much derived from real life. >> way. >> yes. >> reporter: he knew how the series would end for about four years, but in true "mad men" fashion nobody's revealing secrets. >> it's an important part of the story, the end, and it will, i hope, affect the audience just as much as it affects us. and they'll miss it as much as we miss it. >> reporter: kate snow, nbc news, new york. >> and that will do it for us on this thursday night. i'm lester holt. for all of us at nbc news, thank you for watching, and good night. the bay area comes together to honor an officer who gave his thrive protect and serve. >> although we knew it was okay to cry, it was equally okay to laugh. >> a man remembered for his generous heart. >> if yo you were lucky enough to call mike a friend you know mike gave you his all. >> an officer respected for the people he helped. >> i want to give mike a standing ovation for the awesome life that he gave for us. >> tonight team coverage of the memorial for officer michael johnson. good evening and thanks for being with us. i'm raj mathai. >> and i'm janelle wang. jessica aguirre is off tonight. a final salute for officer michael johnson, the san jose police officer killed last week in the line of duty. officers from around the country gathered outside the s.a.p. center in san jose in formation to salute honor, and pay their respects to the fallen officer. it was a poignant and emotional day. nbc bay area's michelle roberts was there as thousands of people made their way into the memorial service. let's begin with robert handa. he is live at the s.a.p. center with more for us. robert? >> reporter: well janelle, the family and the police department said they wanted to make sure today's ceremony conveyed not only sorrow and respect, but also an appreciation for michael johnson, the man outside the uniform. hundreds of officers from departments all over the state escorted the procession, bringing michael johnson to the s. s.a.p. center. it was gathering of

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people. these are the people who work hard, but who don't have a voice. their voice has been taken away. it's also a campaign about restoring honesty and accountability to government. and you see what a mess we're in today. the whole world has been shocked by the continuing revelations regarding hillary clinton and her pay for play state department and other things. now, it was just announced that her important calendar records will not be released, even though they have them, to the public until after the election because there's too much stuff on that. they want it after the election. it's only, it's terrible. it's terrible. it's protection from a corrupt, rigged system. it's disgusting. as i've said many times in recent days, it's hard to tell where the clinton foundation ends and the state department gins. that's what's happened. it's really what happened. sad. the clinton corruption scandals have been really there for a long time and it's been sad, sad, sad for america. the illegal server, the foreign hacking, the deleted -- oh, 33. how many? 33,000. the deleted e-mails. 33,000. the secret schedules, the lying to congress. it's all just too much. we're going to have a great victory on november 8th. i can tell you. we're going to have a great victory. thank you. thank you. how much more can voters take? not much more. thank you. hillary clinton thinks she's entitled to be president. by the way, she got very bad judgment. got very bad judgment. even if she thinks that, she has bad judgment. she thinks she's above the law. so far she's proven that. but the truth is, it's the opposite. her criminal conduct at home and her failed interventions overseas simply make her unfit. she's unfit to serve in the oval office. i believe that america is ready to turn the page on this very sorted past. we don't want another four years of obama or clinton controversies. they're not only dangerous, but, frankly, they're exhausting our people. how do you even keep up with it all? how do you do that? the clintons have had their time on the stage, but now it's time to close that chapter in the history book and open a brand-new beautiful chapter. thank you. thank you very much. that is why this is such an exciting year to be a republican and to vote republican. we're going to do a great job. this year the gop is offering the voters a chance to break up the corrupt establishment and create a new american future. in my opinion, this is our last chance. i really believe that. this chance will never come again. and, remember, justices of the supreme court. remember that. this, it will never, ever come again. it will never happen again. i really believe you're not going to have this opportunity again. the big banks and wall street donors who want nothing to change are throwing millions and millions of dollars at my opponent. these are the same people who paid bill and hillary clinton $150 million for speeches and i guess some other things. hillary clinton's campaign is all about protecting the powerful. and i understand that very well. i think nobody knows the system better than i do. our campaign is about protecting those who have no power. they don't have power. but they're great, great people. they are great people without power. we're going to change that. they will be great people with power. together, we're going to work. we're going to give working people a voice for the first time in many, many decades. they haven't had a choice in a long time. let's talk about what it all means. for our veterans, it means a guarantee that they can seek medical care at either a va facility or a private medical doctor with us paying the cost. and thank you. because we've had such incredible veteran support. just uniform all across the land. never again will we allow a veteran to die waiting for the care they need from a doctor who's fine doctor, but you can't get to ever see your doctor. you wait six days, seven days, nine days. people are dying onliin line. that's not going to happen. we will protect those who protect us. these are our great people. we're going to protect them. it's our turn now. at the center of the change, this is a change agenda is also a plan to fix our rigged economy. it's rigged. the government just revised the growth numbers. you probably saw yesterday, a big story. we had horrible growth numbers. they were announced last month. they made a mistake. they just announced that the number that was announced that was so bad was too high and it had to be readjusted downward. down to 1.1%. just so you understand. if china jumps down to 8% gdp or 9% gdp, it's a major catastrophe. and the same with other countries. and they do things that you don't want to know about, but they make it impossible for your businesses to compete. but they consider it a catastrophe. here we are with no growth. 1.1%. which is no growth. and we have the same leaders that are incompetent and don't know what they're doing but we're going to make a change. we're going to make america grow again. grow. that begins with supporting our family farms right here in iowa. do we have any farmers in the room? do we have any farmers? stand up. i want to see what our farmers -- stand up. that's a lot of farmers. that's a lot of farmers. wow. beautiful. that's a lot of farmers. great farmers. one of the most beautiful landscapes in the world. especially if you like farms, right. family farms are the back bone of this country. remember that. and i know what's happening to you. we are going to end the epa intrusion into your family homes and into your family farms for no reason. what they're doing to you is a disgrace. we're going to get rid of a lot of those regulations that don't mean anything, except cost you a lot of money and a lot of time and in many cases you lose your farms over the regulations. we are going to reduce taxes from 35% to 15%. and the thing, the thing that most surprised me in going around all over the country and talking about that massive tax cut and also for the middle class, but the massive small business and business tax cut or the reduction by a lot of regulations, 100% of the people we talk to feel more strongly about the regulations and who would have thought about that? who could have thought that happened? they feel more strongly about getting rid of these horrible, really horrible regulations and that's what we're going to do. we are going to protect the renewable fuel standard. corn-based ethanol, eliminate job-killing regulations like the waters of the united states rule. which is a disaster. and provide desperately needed tax relief. president obama, president obama lied to you about his support for the renewable fuel standard. and you can trust hillary clinton far less than you could even obama. she will sell you out. she's already sold you out and her donors will be the only ones that are happy. believe me. and you see it happening. just like obama. he made lots of promises. and then he said, bye-bye to iowa. bye-bye. and to other places. almost 97% of farms in this country are family owned and family managed. it's not only a great american tradition, but a vital component of america's economic and national security. so true. yet, hillary clinton wants to shut down family farms. she wants to shut down the miners and the steel workers. she's going to shut that down. that i can tell you. she will do this not only through radical regulation, but also by raising taxes on family farms to rates as high as and i think actually higher than 50%. and just so you understand, i'm cutting taxes massively. she's raising taxes massively. she's raising taxes. adding to the pain. she will tax family farms again at death by as much as 45%. and you've already paid your tax. right? you've paid your tax and now you're going to pay it again and your children and family, very tough situation. you know that. on top of that, her anti-energy agenda will drive up the cost of energy another attack on agriculture. a big attack on what you're doing because we need the energy. we're going to end this war on the american farmer. you are going to like donald trump so much. i'm telling you. you're going to like donald trump. we get it. we all get it. we understand what's going on. that includes our plan to lower the tax rate on family farms down to 15% and to stop double taxation on the family farms at death. helping to ensure that the family tradition in iowa continues to thrive and flourish with your children and your grandchildren and you'll be looking down and you'll be happy. we hope you're looking down, anyway. we hope you're looking doun. you'll be very happy and very proud. we're going to make a very powerful and great trade deal. we're going to have fantastic trade deals. right now we have horrible trade deals. we have the worst trade deals. our country loses, if you look at our trade deficit with the world, $800 billion a year. can you imagine this? who makes these deals? who makes them? let me quote someone i got to know very well. reverend robert schuller. tough times don't last. tough people do. i think it's a great quote. i think it's a great quote. i know you're going through tough times with the farms. we'll be there soon for you. i was so happy to have the support of the evangelical community all over the country. all of them. incredible people. incredible. i hope we can continue to count on evangelical support on november 8th. get out there and vote. we are going to do something very, very special. by the way, i'm protestant. i'm presbyterian. can you believe this. everyone says, really, i don't believe it. i'm presbyterian. very proud of it. we will get rid of the johnson amendment, which is a disaster. which really is a horrible thing. it denies your pastors their right to free speech. and it's had a huge negative impact on religion. a huge negative. we will let your pastors, your ministers, your rabbis and your priests and we'll let them speak agn without losing tax deductibility. we will let them speak. we will let them speak again. we want them to speak. right now they cannot speak. because they will lose all of the benefits that they used to have. 1954. complete disaster. and it's so important that the pastors are going to be talking about it. it's so important that everybody in the evangelical community and other religious communities get out and vote. on november 8th. again, this will be a one-time shot. it was only put there in 1954 by lyndon johnson. so important you get out and vote on november 8th. we'll get rid of it. it should have never happened in the first place. i also know how much the ev evangelical community is deeply committed to helping those in poverty. i know it for a fact. my economic agenda can be summed up in three words, three beautiful words. jobs, jobs, jobs. which we don't have now. i don't even have to mention the tremendous construction workers in this room because i think i have every single one of them. i love my construction workers. do you know how much i've built construction workers. you have a lot of construction workers in iowa. i was surprised to see how many. they love this state and i hope they get out on november 8th. of all americans who want more opportunity and higher wages and safe communities, competent leadership and honest government. very simple. thank you. we're going to send the special interest packing and we're going to, once again, have a government of, by and for the people. going to happen. remember, we sometimes forget. republicans are the party of abraham lincoln. pretty good president, right? pretty good. i said i'm going to be the most presidential president you've ever had and then i thought about abraham lincoln and i said, i don't know. he's pretty tough to beat. abraham lincoln. he's pretty good. that is a great republican. which brings me to a subject that is so important and very personal for me. nothing means more to me than working to make our party the home of the african-american vote, once again. used to be. there are millions and millions of african-americans in this country who have succeeded so greatly and who deserve a government that protects and honors their incredible contribution. so many have been so successful. very nice. but we also have to talk about the millions of african-americans who remain trapped in poverty and in failing schools. they're trapped. i've spoken to a lot. in recent days. a lot of people and i've spoken a lot about the deplorable conditions in many of our inner cities just about all of them. as a father, as a buildier, as n american, it offends my sense of right and wrong to see anyone living in such conditions. they are living in terrible, terrible conditions. beyond belief conditions. bad. almost 40% of african-american children are living in poverty abject poverty. including 45% of children under the age of 6. in detroit, half of its residents do not work. in milwaukee, almost four in ten african-american men between the age of 24 and 54 are not employed and have no prospect of employment. just since yesterday the cousin of nba star dwyane wade, a great guy, dwyane wade. was the victim of a tragic shooting in chicago. she was the mother of four and was killed while pushing her infant child in a stroller just walking down the street. shot. it breaks all of our hearts to see it. it's horrible. it's horrible. and it's only getting worse. this shouldn't happen in our country. this shouldn't happen in america. so we send our thoughts and prayers to the family. and we also promise to fight for a much, much better tomorrow. across -- thank you. across chicago more than 2,700 have been shooting victims since january of this year. think of it. 2,700 people have been shot since january. we cannot, as a society, tolerate this level of violence and suffering in our cities. those who would deny that and you know there are many people that do. and they have their own reasons. many of them are not good reasons. but this is a national crisis. this is a crisis that requires urgent action. have no business. none of these people have any business that support what's been going on running for elected office. none of these people should be even allowed to run. they're a disgrace. for decades and decades and decades, failed democratic policies. the policy of hillary clinton have created this high crime and crushing poverty. absolutely crushing poverty. and so many communities under democratic control, we have bad schools, no jobs, high crime and no hope. it can't get any worse. to those suffering, i say vote for donald trump. i will fix it. african-americans, hispanics, vote for donald trump. i will fix it. it will get fixed. and i add and i add it with all sincerity. what do you have to lose? it can't get any worse. what do you have to lose? let me also tell you what you have to gain. millions of jobs, far better schools, safe communities. you can, in fact, walk outside and walk down the street with your child. with your wife or your husband, by yourself and not be killed and not be shot. not be mugged. we're going to have safe communities, again. and the african-american voter has seen what's been happening over the last two weeks and three weeks with me. and i'll tell you, i think we have a lot of support out there. they're very, very tired of what's been going on. and the hispanic community likewise. they're very sick and tired of what's going on. and it's been going on for decades and decades and decades. by the way, how quickly people have forgotten that hillary clinton called black youth superpredators. remember that? super predators. and they were very, very insulted. but now people have forgot. i'm running to offer a better future to the citizens of detroit, of baltimore, of chicago. all across this great land inner city and outer city. all over. everybody. we're going to come together. we're going to have one great country. greater than ever before. what is sad is that african-americans have given so much to this country. they fought and died in every war since the revolution. they've lifted up the conscious of our nation in the civil rights movement. they've sacrificed so much for the national good. now is a time to put a new agenda into action that expands opportunity, ensures equality and that protects the rights of each and every citizen, including african-american citizens. we have to have help. we have to stop the crime. we have to stop the bad education. we have to help with housing. we have to solve our inner city problems and we will. i will fix it. this includes one of the most important rights of all. the right to live in safety. i will work with communities, with police and with federal law enforcement to make communities safe and secure for all of our people. we are also going to end the discrimination that traps parents and kids in failing government schools. our schools are a disaster. the republican party and me is a party of school choice. you will see a big difference. big, big difference. there is another civil rights issue we need to talk about. and that's the issue of immigration enforcement. every time an african-american citizen or a hispanic citizen or any citizen loses their job to an illegal immigrant, the rights of that american citizen have been totally violated and they're losing their jobs. it is. it's an economic question also. equal protection under the law must include the consistent application of our immigration laws. very simple. these laws were passed to protect american citizens and lawful residents of our country. for instance, federal law protects the ability of american workers to seek jobs and employment. when government suspends those immigration laws in order to favor with special interest and give them campaign contributions and big ones costing americans their jobs. they have been denied the protection of their laws. in recent days, the media, as it usually does, has missed the whole point on immigration. they have missed the point. they have missed the point. all the media wants to talk about is the 11 million people or more or less. they have no idea what the number is because we have no control over our country. they have no idea what it is. that are here illegally. but my priority and really is for the well being of everybody, but in particular the 300 million americans and more. and all of our hispanic silt z s and african-american citizens and legal residents who want a secure border. and i mean secure. they want drugs to stop flowing into their states and into their communities. and they want a great, growing economy. and they want a job. my goal is to provide good jobs and even great jobs. good schools and safety to every hispanic community, african-american community in the country. but, really, what is it? it's to every community. every single community. we can't do that if we don't secure our border. we can't do it. on day one, i'm going to begin swiftly removing criminal, illegal immigrants from this country. including removing the hundreds and thousands of criminal illegal immigrants that have been released into the united states and united states communities under the incompetent obama /clinton administration. these international gangs of thugs and drug cartels will be, i promise you, from the first day in office the first thing i'm going to do. the first piece of paper that i'm going to sign is we're going to get rid of these people. day one. before the wall, before anything. and our great law enforcement, they know who they are. they've been living with them for years. and they don't want to put up with it any more. so, we are going to get rid of them day one. we start day one. you go to some places and you will see the reign of terror will be over and it will be over fast. remember, our law enforcement and our police, who, by the way, should get a treend tmendous ha because of what they have to put up with. they are great people. they are great people. but they know these people. i met with so many of the top police and the people in the rank and file. they know these people. so, it's not like, oh, gee, they know all of them. they know the good ones, the bad ones. they know all of them. we are going to get rid of the criminals and it's going to happen within one hour after i take office we start. okay. and bring them back where they came from. in this task we will always err on the side of protecting the american people. we will use immigration law to prevent crimes and we will not wait until some innocent american has been harmed or killed before taking action. we will move justly, but we will move fast. believe me. and we will move tough. there won't be any games. there won't be any games. flz these are bad people. oh, wow. >> welcome back. >> thank you so much. >> thank you so much. what a team. we're going to build a great wall on the border. and we're going to institute nationwide e-verify and stop illegal immigrants from accessing welfare and entit entitlements and develop an exit entry. you know what that is. exit entry system to ensure those who overstay their visas that they're quickly removed. we don't enforce our visa expiration dates and then we have open borders and we have nothing but crime. it's going to end. i'm also going to cancel all unconstitutional orders. executive orders you've been hearing about that, right? we have a little, a little bit of an excessive order precedent. and empower the rank and file i.c.e. officers to finally do the jobs that they were meant to do. now, what is hillary clinton going to do, governor? what is she going to do? not much, right? she's pledged amnesty in her first 100 days combined with her elimination of virtually all routine immigration enforcement. in other words, totally open borders. which we will lead. this is a massive crime wave. that's what's going to happen. it's not going to happen if i get elected. believe me. most alarmingly, she has pledged to keep president obama's executive amnesty, which has been blocked by the supreme court directly disregarding a supreme court injunction. beyond that, she's pledged to add another executive amnesty in violation of both congressional law and the united states constitution. these actions from hillary clinton will trigger a crisis greater than almost anything we've seen. this will be a constitutional crisis. like we haven't seen in our country. in effect, she's pledging to abolish the law-making powers of congress and assume the powers of an imperial leader. she's not an imperial leader is she? i don't think so. i don't think so. she doesn't, she doesn't even look presidential to me. she certainly doesn't. this executive amnesty would bypass congress to print millions of work permits and benefit cards to those ineligible to receive them. hillary clinton's legislative plan, remember this, is to give illegal immigrants access to obama care, social security, medicare and u.s. welfare. i can see one man that doesn't like that very much. that wouldn't happen here, would it? her plan will functionally end enforcement of visa overstay rules and another open border decrease. you will also close down detention centers for border crossings. meaning she will have an open southern border that will bring nothing but crime and destruction. this is not to mention that she wants a 550% increase in syrian refugees flowing into our country. and she can't even say the words radical islamic terrorism. and she supports sanctuary cities and catch and release policies that are getting innocent american killed. let me tell you, we will end that so quickly. if i get the support, i need the support. will i have the support? you are not a big one for sanctuary cities, i know that. i've met with many of these grieving families including a family that is truly incredible. the family of sarah root. an a student, straight a. a young, beautiful woman who was killed by an illegal immigrant, who was released from the border by obama. and the obama administration with horrible policy. and then released again after the killing. i've been so inspired by the courage and bravery of the root family and so many other families. and i have the root family with us today. and i'd like them to step up and just say hello. these are incredible people. >> 30 weeks ago today, we were watching our daughter walk across the stage to get her bachelor's in criminal investigations. not to know that 15 hours later she would be killed by an illegal alien. they arrested him. a week after my daughter is killed, he is running free. everything we do, all the fight we're doing is to save the next person from having to go through what we're going through. sarah's life cannot be just another life that was lost because of the obama administration. like mr. trump said, they let us down. they had him. they let him go. they had him again and they let him go. i want to thank him so much for all his hard work. everybody that's helped us. tried to keep the story out there. try to prevent this tragedy from happening to another person. because if hillary gets in, it will continue to happen to everybody. trump. go trump. >> thank you so much. i'll see you back there. thank you. >> what an incredible family. and this happens so much. thousands and thousands of people. the crime is unbelievable. and we're going to stop it and we're going to stop the crime. there is a reason that we just got endorsed by 16,500 border patrol agents. they know the system better than anybody. it's easier for them to just relax, but they wanted to endorse. they wanted to see a strong border. we need a strong border if we remain a country. so, i want to just thank them in particular. thank you. hillary's plan is very dangerous. it's very divisive. it's radical and reckless and it's recig recing the innocent of so many. allowing people to come in and you're going to have a crisis like we've never seen in this country. if i'm elected we're not going to have a crisis. we're going to have a great, strong country again. so, the choice hopefully will be clear to the people of iowa and throughout the country. a vote for trump is a vote to have a nation of laws. a vote for clinton is to have dangerous, open borders where anybody can just walk in and do whatever they want. on every issue, our campaign is about making life better for working people. but we can't accomplish that goal unless we break up the special interest monopoly and give the power back to all the people. and that's what we're going to do. many people have said that establishment media assault on me and they have said it. that the establishment media assault on me has been the greatest that they've ever seen in the political history of our country. i feel that. i feel it. i know it. even today some major papers fail to mention how strong our poll numbers have become over the last two-week period. and we're doing very well in iowa, we happen to be leader, by the way. but, but they refuse to print it. but they'll stop printing it. they have no choice eventually. but they refuse to put it down. we're doing great. they, too, are part of a rigged system. the media is totally dishonest. trying to deny people the positive change that they're looking for and they deserve. they take phrases and statements, chop them up, take them out of context and then they discuss them for days and days and days. always trying to demean and belittle just whatever they can do to demean and belittle. our incredible movement. because we, this is one of the great movements. maybe the greatest movement they've seen in the history of our country. many people have said that. we're going to take our country back from the death spiral that it's currently in. imagine if this much media attention was spent telling the truth about the real problem. imagine if the media spent this much time telling the story of sarah root. one of the great young people. one of the truly great outstanding young people. all of the ugly things being said by hillary clinton and our opponents. and you know what they say about me. spending hundreds of millions of dollars on ads and phony ads and disgusting and most people know it or we won't be doing so well. believe me. she's funded by the big banks and wall street donors and nothing more than a desperate attempt by a failed leader. that's all she is. remember, she lost badly to barack obama when she won. and i think she's going to lose badly to donald trump when she won. believe me. she's clinging in order to keep that rigged system going. there's nothing they won't say or do. no lie they won't tell. no amount of money they won't spend into bully voters to give them what they want. they lie like i've never seen anything before. the commercials are phony commercials and they're disgusting and even people on her side are saying that's going too far. it's very interesting. this november 8th, the american people are going to reject the cynicism of the past and embrace the optimism of the future. we have a great future. the old attacks are not going to work any more. the clinton fear mongrg isn't going to r. i want to empower the people. hillary clinton wants to scare the people. empowering people begins with three simple words. and you know what those words are. our economy is going to soar. we are going to make our country so strong and so powerful and we need the power because other people are not going to want to mess with the united states of america. remember that. wages will rise. we will make new friends and we will achieve, like we haven't achieved before. and we will achieve a lasting piece through strength. we will be a country of laws and a country of great, great success. our cities will be safe, sound and secure. our government will be honest, ethical and responsive. rule by special interests will be over, over, over. the rule of the american people will begin, so let's get out and vote for november 8th and create the future our children deserve together. we will make america strong, again. together, we will make america wealthy, again, which we have to do. together, we will make america united, again. we will make america safe, again. we will make america great again. greater than ever before. thank you, thank you very much. thank you, joni ernst. thank you. god bless you, everyone. donald trump in des moines, iowa. in front of the microphones for about 50 minutes there. i'm richard lui in new york city. watching along with us as he just finished this rally is jacob rascon, nbc correspondent there on the ground. jacob, as you were listening to many of the points that he made, pretty consistent from what we heard in the last week. >> and, richard, i would add that he talked specifics on immigration here that we were not expecting. he did mention nationally verified and no access to entitlements for undocumented immigrants and then undocumented criminal immigrants would be gone on day one or he would sign a paper giving that order on day one before the border walk. more specifics on immigration than we heard him talk in the last week and a half. the time in which he has given these scripted remarks. notably he left out what to do without criminal records. that is the issue that has been at the heart of his hardline stance. the one where a year ago, he came out and said we need a deportation course. it really set him apart from the other, the others who were running for the republican nomination. propelled him, really, to that nomination among other things. in the last week, he seemed to waffle on that issue. he did not mention that here. but he did talk immigration. again, we heard as you mention, like we heard in the last week and a half, a direct appeal to african-american and hispanic voters. saying, again, we want every african-american vote talking, again, about their rights and what they need and talking, as well, about the recent shooting in chicago. the high-profile shooting. he was criticized with a tweet he sent out after that. today he offered condolences for the family. notably he's in des moines, iowa. 75% or more white and among the crowd at a quick glance, it's hard to spot any african-americans. on that note, i will add nat the campaign does say that eventually he will have some stops in more urban areas. we'll see when that happens. richard? >> jacob rascon with donald trump, thank you very much. give that speech and rally there in des moines, iowa. let's build off of what jacob said. that is, what about the other noncriminal undocumented immigrants that the question is out there right now. what is his plan with that? >> you know, richard, i think he's filling in those questions and i think it was pointed out. he's a lot more direct on the subject of immigration. frankly, went into a lot more detail than he has lately. i think he's going to continue to build on it so we know. part of what we also heard today that i don't think we talk about enough. the populous message that the government doesn't work for everyday people. i won't let you down. the system is rigged. we need trade agreements. he had the farmers stand up. you know, i think one of the things that we miss when we talk about trump's speeches is that clarity that direct discussion like you would have around a diner table and, so, it's very, very populous message which as we all know is very popular in iowa. >> congressman, as a trump senior adviser, as you are discussing some of the points of the platform here specific to the populous message is certainly all the different, if you will, flavors of the country. the colors of the country. one part of it that he has clearly been adding towards the end of the speeches is the african-american vote. and that, of course, has been, in most cases here, talked about in fairly singular ways. inner city. poverty stricken. and that's not the majority of african-american voters. how do you think this group can be addressed better? >> well, i think what he's talking about is he says, you know what, you need, we need to have competition. you know, if i'm selling you a car and you've already told me you're not going to buy it from my competitor, i'm not going to give you the best deal that i could. maybe he doesn't continue to vote democrat party. but you should look at this and he's talking about these issues. i mean -- >> why so singularly. why is it always inner city and poverty stricken? that certainly does not resonate if he were to be addressing that group, that group. >> you know, it's interesting. i think part of what he's also talking about with immigration is the fact that illegals undercut the wage scale and that cuts across all demographics. so, whether you're african-american or hispanic or white or whatever you're concerned about that. i think that is something that appeals to all rights. >> he's bringing two different topics together that have many layers of that. i don't want to go there yet on that topic. i want to get your thought on this. "new york times" headlines today. no vacancy for blacks and how donald trump got his start and was first accused of bias. basically, the piece analysts decades old government files. they say they uncovered a long history of racial bias at trump's properties. but how do you put that together with what he's trying to do today? do you know if these policies were put in place by him or his father. >> you know, richard, i would never accuse "new york times" of having an agenda when it comes to the trump campaign. the reality is, though, he has created lots and lots of businesses. recently reaching out to jesse jackson and the rainbow push campaigns to give them real estate. he's also had a history of in his private clubs which he has created of minority inclusion. and that's something that, you know, he's gone out on a limb about. i think if he had a history of racial discrimination in his corporations, we would well know about it and i'm sure the "new york times" would be the first -- >> in these government files. that would result in history of documentation of these incidents happening. but i want to finish with this because i know we've all got squeezed on time here. that is i want to go back to immigration the way we started here. what about those children that were brought in by parents into this country who are not documented citizens. but they're undocumented, as well. what do you think donald trump should do about them? >> well, number one. i think the fact that we're talking about immigration is because of donald trump. and he is saying let's consistently enforce existing laws and let's go through the, you know, who is going to be deported and started out with the bad guys. remember, barack obama -- >> should these children be deported, as well. >> border security and no sanctua sanctuary. people like sarah root would not be murdered. let's make the streets safe, again. i think that we're somewhat over some of the -- let me say, richard. this is an important point but i think the overall arching difference between hillary clinton who is open borders. who is pro-amnesty and who is pro sanctuary cities. there is big difference. thanks, richard. >> thanks for sitting with us and giving us your perspective. trump senior adviser. let's bring in our panel now. national reporter for "new york times" ed martin and jonathan alter, msnbc political analyst and columnist for daily beast. we only have four minutes here. he talked longer than usual. we'll start with you. what are minority viewers saying as you're out covering this election. what are minority voters saying about this latest debate and the call for their vote? >> they're saying the way that donald trump is going after him is really offensive. and he's talking to these crowds that are 99 to 95% white. he's not going into the communities and he has yet, as of today, not held a single campaign event and not one in a hispanic community. he's inviting people up the trump tower and invited people, but he's not going into these communities. people are really offended by the fact that he hasn't done this and stop painting our communities in this way with this broad brush that is making us look like people who have all these problems. we are not a problem that need to be fixed. we are people who want to have jobs and good educations. talk about good issues and talk about that and the idea thatou want to have real policies. specific policies for us, not just people that need to be fixed. >> bring that discussion to the folks that you're talking about. ed, i want you to respond to what was said there. >> i'm just a few miles from ferguson and i can tell you i don't mean to be facetious. we have schools that are really failing lots of african-americans and poor kids and we have violence that's really failing african-american families. we have a whole set of problems. what i find incredible that we're not having a different conversation. instead of saying, wow, we have a major leader who is talking about school choice and real problems and, instead, we should be saying just when clinton is on the ropes. when she's got a problem of corruption, she really throws the card. it's the right wing conspiracy card that she's played 15, 20 years ago. >> a lot of folks saying as we were talking about earlier with mr. kingston, he should go to those areas like ferguson. i got to leave it there because i want to let jonathan get the final word. he is definitely doubling down and pushing the issue of going for african-american voters and giving us more details on immigration today. >> i don't think he's going for african-american voters. i think this is all about white women in the suburbs. >> right. >> he's addressing them and saying i'm giving you a permission slip. you're worried that i'm a bigot. here i'm telling you i'm not a bigot. >> that could make a difference like iowa. >> a lot of people in iowa and a lot of other states. he hasn't done well with republican women. and he's trying to get some of them back. they don't want to see their candidate as a bigot. so, that's what he's trying to take the edges off. this is not directed at african-americans. >> 3.5% -- >> he's not going to get very many of their votes. this is about white women in the suburbs. >> make the difference in iowa where he is at then? >> he is doing well in iowa and any clinton supporters who think this election is in the bag, they're dreaming. they need to get online and call into battleground states because this thing is going to be a lot closer than it looks right now. >> final word to you here. let's look at, for instance, georgia. that can make a difference. even if you were to get a sliver of the african-american vote, if even possible. >> the democrat that i talked to that are working in georgia are having a plan to flip that state there. they are going out to african-americans who have infrequently voted and people that they targeted and democrats. they're trying to do that and flip that state. they are feeling really confident about that state. >> all three of you are super guests. ed, i owe you one on this one. thank you so much. you all have a good one. that's all for this hour of msnbc live. i'm richard lui, go to msnbc.com and we'll have all the updates for you. "dateline" is next. have a great saturday. my eyelove is the september issue. eyelove is all the things we love to do with our eyes. but it's also having a chat with your eye doctor about dry eyes that interrupt the things you love. because if you're using artificial tears often and still have symptoms, it could be chronic dry eye. go to myeyelove.com and feel the love. get between you and life's dobeautiful moments.llergens flonase gives you more complete allergy relief. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance. flase controls 6. and six is greater than one. flonase changes everything. ♪ at clorox 2 we've turned removing stains into a science. now pre-treat with clorox 2! watch stains disappear right before your eyes. remove 4 times more stains than detergent alone. soon, she'll type the best essays in the entire 8th grade. get back to great. sixteen gig lexar flash drives just three ninety-nine. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla (apremilast). otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, with reduced redness, thicess, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing infoation has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. side effects may include diarrhea, nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your dermatologist about otezla today. otezla. show more of you. i could not believe it. i couldn't imagine anyone would want to hurt her. i had no idea what could have happened. >> married to her high school sweetheart's family meant everything to her. >> there was always a lot of talk about children. she wanted grandchildren. >> but it all went up in smoke the night she died in a mysterious and monstrous inferno. >> it was to the right of the mattresses that we found the remains of jul.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas Election HQ 20160827

people. everyone. it's going to help everyone. these are the people who work hard, but who don't have a voice. their voice has been taken away. it's also a campaign about restoring honesty and accountability to government and you see what a mess we're in today. the whole world has been shocked by the continuing revelations regarding hillary clinton and her pay-for-play state department and other things. now it was just announced that her important calendar records will not be released, even though they have them, to the public until after the election because there's too much stuff on that. they want it after the election. it's only -- it's terrible. it's terrible. it's protection from a corrupt, rigged system. it's disgusting. as i've said many times in recent days, it's hard to tell where the clinton foundation ends and where the state department begins. that's what's happened. the -- it's really what happened. the clinton corruption scandals have been there for a long time and it's been sad, sad, sad for america. the illegal server, to foreign hacking, the deleting of 33,000, the deleted e-mails, 33,000, the secret schedules, the lying to congress, it's all just too much. we're going to have a great victory on november 8th, i can tell you. we're going to have a great victory. thank you. thank you. how much more can voters take? not much more. thank you. hillary clinton thinks she's entitled to be president. by the way, she's got very bad judgment. got very bad judgment. even if she thinks that she's got bad judgment. she thinks she's above the law. so far she's proven that, but the truth is it's the opposite. her criminal conduct at home and her failed interventions overseas simply make her unfit. she is unfit to serve in the oval office. i believe that america is ready to turn the page on this very sordid past. we don't want another four years of obama or clinton controversies. they are dangerous and they are exhausting our people. how do you keep up with it all? the clintons have had their time on the stage, but now it's time to close that chapter in the history book and open a brand new beautiful chapter. that -- thank you. thank you very much. that is why this is such an exciting year to be a republican and to vote republican. we're going to do a great job. this year the gop is offering the voters a chance to break up the corrupt establishment and create a new american future. in my opinion, this is our last chance. i really believe that. this chance will never come again. and remember, justices of the supreme court. remember that. this -- it will never, ever come again. it will never happen again. i really believe you're not going to have this opportunity again. the big banks and wall street donors who want nothing to change are throwing millions and millions of dollars at my opponent. these are the same people who paid bill and hillary clinton $150 million for speeches and i guess some other things. hillary clinton's campaign is all about protecting the pourl. and i understand that very well. i think nobody knows the system better than i do. our campaign is about protecting those who have no power. they don't have power, but they're great, great people. they are great people without power. we're going to change that. they'll be great -- they will be great people with power. together we're going to work. we're going to give working people a voice for the first time in many, many decades. they haven't had a voice in a long time. let's talk about what it all means. for our veterans it means a guarantee that they can seek medical care at either a va facility or in a private medical doctor with us paying the costs. and thank you because we've had such incredible veteran support uniform all across the land. never again we will allow a veteran to die waiting for the care they need from a doctor who is a fine doctor, but you can't get to ever see your doctor, you wait six days, seven days, nine days. people are dying on line. that's not gonna happen. we will protect those who protect us. these are our great people. we are going to protect them. it's our turn now. at the center of our change and this is a changed agenda is also a plan to fix our rigged economy. it's rigged. the government just revised the growth numbers, you probably saw yesterday there was a big story, we had horrible growth numbers. they were announced last month. they made a mistake. they just announced that the number that was announced that was so bad was too high and it had to be readjusted downward down to 1.1%. just so you understand, if china drops down to 8% gdp or 9% gdp, it's a major catastrophe and the same with other countries and they do things that you don't want to know about but they make it impossible for your businesses to compete but they consider it a catastrophe. here we are with no growth, 1.1%, which is no growth, and we have the same leaders that are incompetent and don't know what they're doing. we're going to make america grow again, make it grow. that begins with supporting our family farms right here in iowa. do we have in any farmers in th room? stand up. that's a lot of farmers. that's a lot of farmers. wow. beautiful. that's a lot of farmers. great farmers. one of the most beautiful landscapes in the world, especially if you like farms, right. family farms are the backbone of this country, remember that. and i know what's happening to you. we are going to end the epa intrusion into your family homes and into your family farms for no reason. what they're doing to you is a disgrace. we're going to get rid of a lot of those regulations that don't mean anything except cost you a lot of money and time and in many cases you lose your farms over the regulations. we are going to reduce taxes from 35% to 15% and the thing that most surprised me is going around all over the country and talking about that massive tax cut and also for the middle class but the massive small business and business tax cut or the reduction by a lot of regulations, 100% of the people i talked to feel more strongly about the regulations and who would have thought about that. who would have thought that could happen, but they feel more strongly about getting rid of these horrible, really horrible regulations and that's what we're going to do. we are going to protect the renewable fuel standard corn based eth naul, eliminate job killing regulations like the united states rule which is a disaster and provide desperately needed tax relief. president obama -- president obama lied to you about his support for the renewable fuel standard and you can trust hillary clinton far less than you could even obama. she will sell you out. she's already sold you out and her donors will be the only ones that are happy, believe me, and you see it happening. just like obama. he made lots of promises and he said bye bye to iowa and lots of other places. almost 97% of farms in this country are family owned and family managed. it's not only a great american tradition, but a vital component of america's economic and national security. so true. yet hillary clinton wants to shut down family farms just like she wants to shut down the miners and the steel workers. she's going to shut them down. that i can tell you. she will do this not only through radical regulation, but also by raising taxes on family farms to rates as high as -- and i think actually higher than 50%. and just so you understand, i'm cutting taxes massively. she is raising taxes massively. raising taxes. adding to the pain, she will tax family farms again at death by as much as 45%. and you've already paid your tax, right? you've paid your tax. now you're going to pay it again and your children and family, it's a very tough situation, you know that. on top of that her anti-energy agenda will drive up the cost of energy. another attack on agricultural. it's a big attack on what you're doing because you need the energy. we're going to end this war on the american farmer. you are going to like donald trump so much, i'm telling you. you're going to like donald trump. we get it. we all get it. we understand what's going on. that includes our plan to lower the tax rate on family farms down to 15% and to stop double taxation on the family farms at death helping to ensure that the family farm tradition in iowa continues to thrive and flourish with your children and your grandchildren and you'll be looking down and you'll be happy. we hope you're looking down, anyway. we hope you're looking down. you'll be very happy and very proud. we're going to make a very powerful and great trade deal. we're going to have fantastic trade deals. right now we have horrible trade deals. we have the worst trade deals. our country loses if you look at our trade deficit with the world $800 billion a year. can you imagine this? who makes these deals? who makes them? to those going through hardship let me quote somebody that i got to know very well, reverend robert schuller. tough times don't last but tough people do. i think it's a great quote. i know you're going through a little tough times with the farms but hang in there. we'll be there soon hopefully for you. i've been so honored to have e support of the evangelical community all over the country. incredible people. incredible. i hope we can continue to count on evangelical support on november 8th. get out there and vote. we are going to do something very very special. by the way, i'm protestant. i'm prysby tarn. can you believe it? we will get rid of the johnson amendment, which is a disaster. happened in 1954 by johnson which really is a horrible thing. if denies your pastors their right to free speech and it's had a huge negative impact on religion. a huge negative. we will let your pastors, your ministers, your rabbis, your priests, we will let them speak again without losing tax deductibility. we will let them speak again. we want them to speak. right now they cannot speak because they will lose all of the benefits that they used to have. 1954, a complete disaster and it's so important that the pastors are going to be talking to you about it but it's so important that everybody in the evangelical community and other religious communities get out and vote on november 8th because again this will be a one-time shot. it's going to be gone. don't forget, it was only put there in 1954 by johnson so so important this you get out and vote on november th. we will get rid of it. it should never have happened in the first place. i also know how much the evangelical community is deeply committed to helping those in poverty. i know it for a fact. my economic agenda could be summed up in three words. three beautiful words. jobs, jobs, jobs which we don't have now. i don't even have to mention the tremendous construction workers in this room because i think i have every single one of them. i love my construction workers. do you know how much i built construction workers. you have a lot of construction workers in iowa. i was actually surprised to see how many but they love this state and i hope they get out on november th. i'm asking for the support of all americans who want more opportunity, higher wages, safe communities, competent leadership and honest government, very simple. thank you. we're going to send the special interests packing and we are going to once again have a government of, by and for the people. it's gonna happen. remember, and we sometimes forget, republicans are the party of abraham lincoln. pretty good president, right? pretty good. i said i'm going to be the most presidential president you've ever had and then i thought about abrah ra ham lincoln whic brings me to a subject that is so important and very personal for me. nothing means more to me than working to make our party the home of the african-american vote once again. used to be. there are millions and millions of african-americans in this country who have succeeded so greatly and who deserve a government that protects and honors their incredible contribution. so many have been so successful. very nice. but we also have to talk about the millions of african-americans who remain trapped in poverty and in failing schools. they're trapped. i've spoken to a lot in recent days, a lot of people, and i've spoken a lot about the deplorable conditions in many of our inner cities, just about all of them. as a father, as a builder, as an american, it offends my sense of right and wrong to see anyone living in such conditions. they are living in terrible, terrible conditions, beyond belief conditions, bad. almost 40% of african-american children are living in poverty, ab jekt positiveverty, includin of children under the age of 6. in detroit, half of its residents do not work. in milwaukee almost four in ten african-american men between the age of 24 and 54 are not employed and have no prospect of employment. more than 6,000 african-americans are the victims of murder, of murder, every single year. just yesterday the cousin of nba star dwayne was the victim of a tragic shooting in chicago. she was the mother of four and was killed while pushing her infant child in a stroller just walking down the street. shot. it breaks all of our hearts to see it. it's horrible. it's horrible. and it's only getting worse. this shouldn't happen in our country. this shouldn't happen in america. so we send our thoughts and prayers to the family and we also promise to fight for a much, much better tomorrow. across -- thank you. across chicago more than 2,700 have been shooting victims since january of this year. think of it, 2,700 people have been shot since january. we cannot as a society tolerate this level of violence and suffering in our cities. those who would deny that and you know there are many people that do, and they have their own reasons, many of them are not good reasons, but this is a national crisis. this is a crisis that requires urgent action, have no business, none of these people have any business that support what's been going on running for elected office. none of these people should be even allowed to run. they're a disgrace. but decades and decades and decades, failed democratic policies, the policy of hillary clinton have created this high-crime and crushing poverty in so many communities under democratic control. we have bad schools, no jobs, high crime and no hope. it can't get any worse. to those suffering, i say vote for donald trump. i will fix it. african-americans, hispanics, vote for donald trump, i will fix it. it will get fixed. what do you have to lose? it can't get any worse. what do you have to lose? let me also tell you what you have to gain. millions of jobs, far better schools, safe communities where you can in fact walk outside and walk down the street with your child, with your wife or your husband, by yourself and not be killed and not be shot, not be mugged. we're going to have safe communities again. and the african-american voter has seen what's been happening over the last two weeks and three weeks with me and i tell you i think we have a lot of support out there. they are very very tired of what's been going on and the hispanics community likewise. it's been going on for decades and decades and decades. how quickly people have forg forgotten that hillary clinton called black youth super predato predators, remember that, super predators and they were very very insulted but now people have forgot. i'm running to offer a better future to the citizens of detroit, baltimore, chicago, all across this great land, inner city, outer city, all over, we're going to come together and have one great country, greater than ever before. and what is sad is that african-americans have given so much to this country. they've fought and died in every war since the revolution. they've lifted up the the nation and they've sacrificed so much for the national good. now it's time to put a new agenda into action that expands opportunity, ensures equality and protects the rights of each and every citizen including african-american citizens. we have to help. we have to stop the crime. we have to stop the bad education. we have to help with housing. we have to solve our inner city problems and we will. i will fix it. this includes one of the most important rights of all, the right to live in safety. i will work with communities, with police and with federal law enforcement to make communities safe and secure for all of our people. we are also going to end the discrimination that traps parents and kids in failing government schools. our schools are a disaster. the republican party and me is a party of school choice. you will see a big difference. big, big difference. there is another civil rights issue we need to talk about and that's the issue of immigration enforcement. every time an african-american citizen or a hispanic citizen or any citizen loses their job to an illegal immigrant, the rights of that american citizen have been totally violated. they're losing their jobs. it really is, it's an economic question also. equal protection under the law must include the consistent application of our immigration laws. very simple. these laws were passed to protect american citizens and lawful residents of our country. for instance, federal law protects the ability of american workers to seek jobs and employment. when government suspend those immigration laws in order to curry favor with special interests that give them campaign contributions and big ones, costing americans their jobs, they have been denied the protection of their laws. in recent days the media as it usually does has missed the whole point on immigration. they have missed the point. all the media wants to talk about is the 11 million people or more or less they have no idea what the number is because we have no control over our country. they have no idea what it is that are here illegally, but my priority and really it's for the well-being of everybody, but in particular the 300 million americans and more and all of our hispanic citizens and all of our african-american citizens, legal residents who want a secure boarder, and i mean secure, they want drugs to stop flowing into their states and into their communities and they want a great growing economy and they want a job. my goal is to provide good jobs and even great jobs, good schools and safety to every hispanic community, african-american community in the country. but really what is it? it's to every community. every single community. we can't do that if we don't secure our boarder. we can't do it. on day one i'm going to begin swiftly removing criminal, illegal immigrants from this count country, including removing the hundreds and thousands of criminal illegal immigrants that have been released into the united states and united states communities under the incompetent obama/clinton administration. these international gangs of thugs and drug cartels will be, i promise you, from the first day in office, the first thi goe of paper that i'm going to sign is we're going to get rid of these people, day one, before the wall, before anything. and our great law enforcement, they know who they are. they've been living with them for years and they don't want to put up with it anymore. so we are going to get rid of them, day one. we start day one. the reign of terror, and it is that. you go to some places and you will see the reign of terror will be over and it will be over fast. remember, our law enforcement, our police, who, by the way, should get a tremendous hand because what they have to put up with. they are great people. they're great people. but they know these people. i've met with so many of the top police and the people in the rank and file, they know these people so it's not like oh gee, they know all of them. they know the good ones, the bad ones, they know all of them. we are going to get rid of the criminals and it's going to happen within one hour after i take office we start, okay. we're going to bring them back to where they came from. in this path we will always err on the side of protecting american people. we will use immigration law to prevent crimes and we will not wait until some innocent american has been harmed or killed before taking action. we will move justly, but we will move fast, believe me, and we will move tough. there won't be any gangs. there won't be any gangs. these are bad people. what a team. we're going to build a great wall on the boarder and we're going to institute nation-wide e-veri e-verify, stop illegal immigrants from accessing welfare and entitlements and develop an exit system to ensure that overstays their visas and they're quickly removed. it's going to end. i'm also going to cancel all unconstitutional orders, executive orders you've been hearing about that, right? we have a little bit of an excessi excessive executive order president and the power of rank in file of boarder patrol officers to do finally do the jobs they were meant to do. what is hillary clinton going to do, governor? she's not going to do much. she's pledged am nnesty in the first 100 days and immigration enforcement. totally open boarders which we will leave. this is a massive crime wave. that's what's going to happen. it's not going to happen if i get elected, believe me. most alarmingly she has pledged to keep president obama's executive amnesty which has been blocked by the supreme court directly disregarding a supreme court injunction. beyond that she's pledged to add another executive amnesty in violation of both congressional law and the united states constitution. these actions from hillary clinton will trigger a crisis greater than almost anything we've seen. this will be a constitutional crisis like we haven't seen in our country. in effect heshe's pledging to abolish the law making powers of congress and assume the powers of an imperial leader. she's not an imperial leader is she? she doesn't even look presidential to me. she certainly doesn't. this executive amnesty would bipass congress to print millions of work permits and benefit cards to those ineligible to receive them. hillary clinton legislative plan is to give illegal immigrants access to obamacare, social security, medicare and u.s. welfare. i can see one man that doesn't like that very much. that would not happen here, would it? her plan would functionally end enforcement of visa overstay rules, another open boarder. she will close down detention centers for boarder crossings, meaning she will have an open southern boarder that will bring nothing but crime and destruction. this is not to mention that she wants a 550% increase in syrian refugees flowing into our country. and she can't even say the words radical islamic terrorism. and she supports sanctuary cities and catch and release policies that are getting innocent americans killed. let me tell you, we will end that so quickly, if we get the support, i need the support -- will i have the support? you're not a big one for sanctuary cities, i know that. i've met with many of these grieving families, including a family that is truly incredible. the family of sara ruth, an "a" student, straight "a," a young beautiful woman who was killed by an illegal immigrant who was released from the boarder by obama and the obama administration with horrible policy and then released again after the killing. i've been so inspired by the courage and bravery of the family and so many other families and i have the family with us today and i'd like them to step up and just say hello. these are incredible people. >> 30 weeks ago today we were watching our daughter walk across the stage to get her bachelor's in criminal investigation not to know that 15 hours later she would be killed by an illegal alien. they arrested him and the judge set a bond of $50,000. a week after my daughter was killed he is running free. everything we do, all the fight we're doing is to save the next person from having to go through what we're going through. sara's life cannot be just another life that was lost because of the obama administration. like mr. trump said, they let us down. they had him. they let him go. they had him again. they let him go. and i want to thank him so much for all his hard work. everybody that's happened us try to keep the story out there, try to prevent this tragedy from happening to another person because if hillary gets in, it will continue to happen to everybody. trump, go trump. >> what an incredible family. and this happens so much. thousands and thousands of people, the crime is unbelievable. and we're going to stop it. we're going to stop the crime. there's a reason that we just got endorsed by 16,500 boarder patrol agents. they know the system than anybody. it's easier for them to just relax but they want to endorse and they want a strong boarder. we need a strong boarder if we are going to remain a country so i want to just thank them in particular. thank you. hillary's plan is very dangerous. it's very divisive. it's radical. it's reckless. it's wrecking the innocent lives of so many people and we will have an unprecedented crisis. we're allowing people to come in. you're going to have a crisis like we have never seen in this country and if i'm elected we're not going to have a crisis. we're going to have a strong, great country again. so the choice hopefully will be clear to the people of iowa and throughout the country. a vote for trump is a vote to have a nation of laws. a vote for clinton is a vote to have dangerous open boarders where anybody can just walk in and do whatever they want. on every issue, our campaign is about making life better for working people, but we can't accomplish that goal unless we break up the special interest monopoly and give the power back to all the people and that's what we're going to do. many people have said that is establishment media assault on me and they have said it, that the establishment media assault on me has been the greatest that they've ever seen in the political history of our country. i feel that. i feel it. i know it. even today some major papers failed to mention how strong our poll numbers have become over the last two week period and we're doing very well in iowa. we happen to be leading, by the way. but they refuse to print it, but they'll start printing it. they'll have no choice eventually but they refuse to put it down. we're doing great. they too are part of a rigged system. the media is totally dishonest. it's a rigged system trying to deny people the positive change they're looking for and deserve. they take phrases and statements and chop them up and take them out of context and discuss them for days and days and days always trying to demean and belittle just whatever they can do to demean and belittle our incredible movement because we have a movement. this is one of the great movements, maybe the greatest movement they've ever seen in the history of our country. and many people have said that. we're going to take our country back from the death spiral that it's currently in. imagine if this much media attention was spent telling the truth about the real problems facing our country, imagine if the media spent this much time telling the story of sarah root, one of the great young people, one of the truly great outstanding young people, all of the ugly things being said by hillary clinton and opponents and you know what they say about me and boy is that untrue, they're spending hundreds of millions of dollars on phoney ads and most people know it or we wouldn't be doing so well. she's fund ed by the big banks and wall street donors and nothing more than an attempt by failed leaders. remember, she lost badly to barack obama when she won and i thi think she's going to lose badly to donald trump. believe me. she's clinging in order to keep that rigged system going. there's nothing they won't say or do, no lie they won't tell, no amount of money they won't spend to try and bully voters into giving them what they want. they lie like i've never seen anything before. the commercials are phoney commercials. they're disgusting. and even people on her side on saying that's going too far. it's very interesting. this november 8th, the american people are going to reject the cynicism of the past and embrace the optimism of the future. we have a great future. the old aattacks are not going to work any more. fearmongering isn't going to resonate with anyone but the most radical factions of their far left base and it's gotten far left. i want to empower the people. hillary clinton wants to scare the people. empowering people begins with three simple words and you know what those words are. our economy is going to soar. we are going to make our country so strong and so powerful and we need the power because other people are not going to want to mess with the united states of america. remember that. wages will rise. we will make new friends abroad and we will achieve like we haven't achieved before and we will achieve a lasting piece through strength. we will be a country of laws and a country of great, great success. our cities will be safe, sound and secure. our government will be honest, ethical and responsive. rule by special interest will be over, over, over. the rule of the american people will begin so let's get out and vote on november 8th and create the future our children deserve. together, we will make america strong again. together, we will make america wealthy again, which we have to do. together, we will make america united again. we will make america safe again. we will make america great again, greater than ever before. thank you. thank you very much. thank you. thank you. ♪ >> god bless you everyone. ♪ and so there you have it, donald trump, the republican presidential nominee, speaking at the event sponsored by the senator of iowa and she is standing at his side. they embraced after he gave his speech, a speech that went on for about nearly 45 minutes and he talked about many things. he addressed the farmers in that community, the evangelical in iowa as well as discussed as he typically does immigration, stating that he would continue to push for a strong immigration, strong boarder, securing the boarders, saying it is tan tau mont to securing the country. he addressed the african-americans. many people will have response to see what donald trump talked about today but as he goes into the crowd you can see he is very much well liked by that particular crowd. a lot of people will say he spoke to his base and did he do what the senator asked for in the beginning prior to his speaking. she said she did not want donald trump to talk about anyone personally and to make personal attacks but wanted to discuss the policies and issues. so the question going forward is did he accomplish that staying scripted and going off script from time to time. >> peter is live at the iowa state fair there in des moines and he listened in to the speech. so peter, what about it? did he do what the senator asked him to do which is kind of stick to the issues? we did hear him touch on plenty there. >> reporter: it's going to be really interesting to see how that shot at the end is received by some of the mainstream media who were openly wondering the last few days why aren't more establishment republicans sticking up for trump as the clinton campaign really goes after him hard for a variety of things, but there you seeith th senator chuck grassley was here earlier and a member of congress and the governor of iowa. so it looks from that shot at the end like a lot of the so-called problems that trump has been having with his party's leaders may be a little bit overblown and if there were any problems it seems like they may be going away or have gone away. something else very powerful at this speech as trump for the last few days has tried to make sure the people understand what his immigration policy is. he brought up the family of a woman named sarah root who was killed by an illegal immigrant who was drunk driving and then was eventually released from prison and is still out there. so his family -- rather her family came up and they helped donald trump make a point about boarder security, which may be a preview of the personal touch he plans to put on his immigration platform that he says he's going to reveal in the next two weeks now. something else donald trump did today, continued his outreach to african-americans by not only telling the audience that hillary clinton supports policies that are directly responsible for high poverty rates and high crime rates in the inner cities, but also he tried to remind african-americans who may be listening that two decades ago hillary clinton used language talking about some in their community that at the time was considered was very offensive. listen to this. >> by the way, how quickly people have forgotten that hillary clinton called black youth super predators. remember that, super predators, and they were very very insulted but now people have forgot. i'm running to offer a better future to the citizens of detroit, of baltimore, of chicago, all across this great land inner city and outer city, all over, everybody, we're going to come together, we're going to have one great country, greater than ever before. >> reporter: something else donald trump said today was very interesting as he continues to -- as the attacks on hillary clinton continue on evolve. he's no longer talking about how she would be another four or eight years of obama, he's now pitching the idea she would be a whole lot worse. listen here. >> we don't want another four years of obama or clinton controversies. they're dangerous, but frankly they're exhausting our people. how do you even keep up with it all? how do you do that? the clintons have had their time on the stage, but now it's time to close that chapter in the history book and open a brand new beautiful chapter. >> reporter: and donald trump has been spending as much time here in iowa, a swing state with big electoral votes up for grabs, as he has in any other swing states. something he said that was tayl tailered for this audience, he's comparing the regulations that he says hillary clinton wants to impose on farmers to those that he said earlier in other parts of the country like ohio, west virginia and parts of pennsylvania, would put coal miners out of business. so he talked about a war on farmers. he said that he would be on the farmers' side and hillary clinton would not. we may hear some of more of that as the general election really starts to ramp up as we near labor day. >> iowa has six electoral votes. how important is the state this year? >> reporter: the amount of time that he is spending here shows he thinks it is very important. and that's why it's so significant potentially looking ahead to help that he might need if the polls stay close, which they are right now, some have it within the margin of error with hillary clinton, to have the longest serving country governor in the country and to have joanie erns and chuck grassley who is in a hotly contested reelection fight to have them all here with donald trump, people that republicans in the state are familiar with and have supported in the past, could be very significant in this state again that come to these rallies. some of the events that trump has been having recently not in swing states, he'll go to do a fundraiser and he'll have an event and some people scratch their heeds about why is he here. he comes here to do these big events and it shows he does have a lot of support here and it's going to be close and it's got the support, the backing of some very very powerful people in the party in this state. >> peter live in iowa. thank you. kelly. so with us now is a columnist for the national review. john, you're perspective on what donald trump did today with this speech in iowa. >> donald trump needs to go back to iowa and boost his numbers. he lost the caucus there. he only got 22% of the caucus vote. but he's a popularist. he's going back to build up his name brand. the african-american outreach is interesting. i don't think it really is directed at iowa voters. less than 3% of iowa voters are african-american. i think it's directed more at moderate republicans who blanch a little bit if a candidate looks too mean. he can say i'm not wild man that you heard about. >> since you brought that up, his speech in terms of reaching out to african-americans, let's drill down on that particular point for a little while. because he also sent a message out to african-americans quoting or at least basically talking about what happened to nba star's cousin who was walking on the streets of chicago. let's listen to that sound bite or that statement from donald trump just moments ago. >> more than 6,000 african-americans are the victims of murder, of murder, every single year. just yesterday the cousin of nba star dwayne, a great guy, was the victim of a tragic shooting in chicago. she was the mother of four and was killed while pushing her infant child in a stroller just walking down the street. shot. it breaks all of our hearts to see it. it's horrible. it's horrible. and it's only getting worse. this shouldn't happen in our country. this shouldn't happen in america. so we send our thoughts and prayers to the family and we also promise to fight for a much, much better tomorrow. >> so john, as you know trump met with various conservative african-american leaders in his offices here in new york this past week. that statement that he made about the crime that goes on in chicago, does it relate to african-americans? what do you think the response will be from that community where he is losing in terms of the percentage of people who will follow him? >> well, there's a black divide in the country between whether or not it should be black lives matter or whether or not it should be concerned about black victims of crime. what donald trump is saying that hillary clinton is on the side of black lives matter and she may be soft on the police and whether they need help. so donald trump is trying to create a split between traditional black voters and who black voters who take an anti-police view. >> a strategy he's been told to do. >> i think it's smart. it's a smart plan. >> we have to wrap it up but we thank you for joining us and sharing your perspective on donald trump's speech. i'll be back at 7:00 p.m. for the fox report. thanks for joining us. been expecting you. will you be needing anything else? no. not a thing. beautyrest black. get your beautyrest. my ancestor, lady eleanor, bmade it big in textiles. my great-grandfather bernard wrote existential poetry. and uncle john was an explorer. i inherited their can-do 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