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people who it is on couch all day have the same risk of death as smokers. and if you do both, slit your wrists, i guess. >> that is all ahead unless breaking news changes everything. this is "studio b." >> but there is breaking news now on fox news. a mideast analyst tells fox news the syrian regime could fall in 36 hours. the white house says president assad is losing control and, today, what could be a sign of things to come: a bomb tore through a national security building in the syrian capital reportedly killed three top government officials including the syrian president's bashar al-assad's brother-in-law. it happened not capital city of damascus not far from the presidential palace, syrians say the television reported it was suicide terror attack but the rebels say they planted that bomb and they spent a month planning this particular assault. of course, restrictions on independent news reports in syria make it very difficult for us to confirm anything. state run television has identified two of the officials killed. the defense minister was a former general and is the most senior government casualty since the syrian uprising began. and the attack killed the deputy defense minister. he was one of the most feared figures inside's president assad inner circle and married to president assad's older sister. we have amateur video claiming it shows syrian people celebrated deadly attack on the government. the activists say the syrian uprising has killed 17,000 people since last march. now, the white house is putting new pressure on nearly every member of the in place syrian government. dramatic developments today. james? >>reporter: president obama telephoned russian president putin from the white house this morning to discuss syria the whereabouts bashar al-assad are not known. and we do not know if he is in damascus. no one, no one can say how long he will remain in power. but, policymakers here at the state department are bracing for the prospect of regime change in syria occurring on a much swifter timetable than previously contemplated. analyst whose monitor social media like twitter and who have advised the state department during the arab spring on how to mine open source online data and how to interpret it is warning the assad regime or control of damascus could collapse in 36 hours which saw similar online activity prior to the fall of muammar qaddafi in libya and is regarded as be "amazeingly accurate," following the ouster of mubarak if egypt. all this is spinning out-of-control rapidly. and for that reason, it is >>guest: i steamily important the international community working with other countries have concerns in that area bring maximum pressure on assad to do what is right, to step down and allow for the peaceful transition. >>reporter: replacements have been named for the assassinated interior minister and the dense minister who is visible at the right of the screen in the photo with president assad but now officials are watching to see mines of defection and assess how well fortified the strongholds are. >> this comes in the midst of fighting that has been going on in the capital of damascus for several days indicating the inability of the regime even to control the capital. so, indeed, where a few days we might have said that syria is facing the last in as a regime, this event could shorten the timetable to weeks. >>reporter: the white house and treasury stepped up sanctions against top syrian officials and warned the top military officials to refrain from using chemical weapons. >>shepard: james, thank you from the state department. and now to judith miller, pulitzer prize winning journalist. >>guest: this big, something that no one anticipated. there were a few warning signs before but no one thought the free syrian army was capable of getting inside a three-story building that is the heart of the national security apparatus of the regime and blow up not only the two leading defense officials. i cannot stress how important this defense is, the brother-in-law, shep, of the president. because he was his father's advisor. this is a long-standing inner core guy. he is dead. this regime has been decapitated but for the president himself. so, this is a very crucial moment. >>shepard: the president is missing. one might guess that if something bad were to happen to someone in the inner circle and he could come to a camera without fear he would do so but it is nightfall in damascus and in sign. >>guest: no sign of him. really, most analysts i have talked to today, say, let's not be too quick to pronounce the death of the regime because everything will depend on how loyal the army is and what he asks them to do if he is still in charge. and we assume he. if they are asked to massacre their way out of it, many of the sunni army people may not go along. this could be the end. that is why people are talking about 36 hours. >>shepard: why 36 hours? you have to figure he will order to do things such as get more helicopters, more bombing of people, more pictures and he does not want that and concern of the chemical weapons. will the soldiers use them? >>guest: well they use them? will he use them? everyone knows that is as the administration has warned syria, a red line, even for the russians that would be tough. the foreign minister of russia has said this is a decisive moment in the unfolding of this drama. and the russians are key here. what they decide to do, what they decide to temperature -- tell assad could determine their actions. >>shepard: your the russians against the free world and with damascus and president assad on this matter? >>guest: because syria russia's only dependable arab ally because they have a port in syria. a warm water port. and because the russians don't want the americans or the west to control developments in this critical region. they want to be players. they want to be taken into account, and they are right now. coffee an is working very hard to try and get them to sign on to some kind of resolution. so far, no luck, but let's see what tomorrow will bring. >>shepard: developments are happening very quickly after 18 months. updates as they happen. judith, thank you. >> now the record drought. the agriculture secretary now warning that it will trigger a spike in prices on everything from wheat and grain across the board. more than half of the lower 48 states now report drought conditions, the widest area we have seen in half a century. according to the federal government. and wendell, what is the administration's idea of what to do about this? >>guest: well, secretary of agriculture has cut the processing time, for disaster and cut the price for grazing on public land but the government cannot make it rain and with more than half the farmland in the continental united states affected by the drought the secretary says that congress needs to get involved. >> we obviously need some help working with congress to create greater flexibility and revive the disaster programs that, allowed to >>guest: i spy, and to pass a food, farm and jobs bill. >>reporter: that is hung up in the house of representatives partly because of a dispute over money for food stamps which are administered by the agriculture department. >>shepard: and the agriculture secretary saying watch out for price gouging. >>reporter: well, yes, because of the increase in the cost of feed some farmers are selling off their herds usually so meat could go down in the short-term before they go up. >> food prices for beef and poultry and pork could go down, a bit, but over time they will rise. probably see the higher prices later this year and first part of next year. processed food, obviously, impacted by crop yields. and we would likely see the increase of that also in 2013. >>reporter: a lost farmers will be hurt but it is nothing like the dust bowl days because of improvement in land management and drought resistant seeds but quote have the third largest corn harvest in history. >>shepard: thank you from a steamy day at white house. >> more ahead on the syrian civil war, the regime is crumbling and the entire country appears to be falling into chaos and the united nations just delayed yet another vote on what to do about it. doctors will be able to write prescriptions if a new weight loss drug and this is a whole new world. it could be $1 billion win for the campaign selling it. and for fat people everywhere. we hope. [ barks ] ♪ [ upbeat ] [ barks ] beneful playful life is made with energy-packed wholesome grains... and real beef and egg. to help you put more play in your day. >>shepard: breaking news and the pentagon report has punished several members of the military for their role in the colombia hooker scandal. but it will not file any criminal charges. investigators say this year members of the military joined a dozen secret service agents who partied with prostitutes in colombia before bringing some of the women back do their hotel rooms. this happened just before president obama was set to arrive for a conference and now u.s. officials say seven army soldiers and two u.s. marines are receiving administration punishment and one was republic mapped and decisions are pending for two navy sailors. >> secretary of defense panetta is warning iran against any attempt to block key shipping lanes in the gulf region saying the united states will intervene if iran disobeys. this comes amid the continuing stand off over iran's nuclear program, and the continues threat to close the strait of hormuz a move that could cut off 20 percent of the world's oil supply. jennifer griffin is at the pentagon, with strong words from the secretary today. >>reporter: and they come one day after the pentagon announced the unprecedented large war game that is going to take place in the persian gulf in september. secretary panetta, today, issued his wanting after meeting with the u.k. defense minister here at the pentagon and he told the iranians to think twice before closing the strait. >> the united states and the international community are going to hold them directly responsible for any disruption of shipping if that region. >>reporter: the iranian parliament has simply issued verbal threats, threatening to target any ships going through the strait would take part in the oil embargo against iran's oil industry. but they have not taken any moves yet to close the state. >>shepard: "hold them responsibility," does not make anyone quake. did he give specifics? >>reporter: he said they are increasing their resources, assets in the region, and he is referring, of course, to some of the recent reports that the pentagon is sending, an anti-missle defense shield out to the persian gulf, but, also, on its way is the demining flotilla, a floating base for special operations forces that will be able to host these kind of special operations divers. >> we have invested in capabilities to ensure that the iranian attempt to close down the shipping in the gulf is something that we are going to be able to defeat. >>reporter: the iranian military has practiced mining exercises since back to 2006 with iranian divers practiced placing mines underwater for years. the united states and 20 nations depend on the straits are firing a warning shot that they will not stand for any closing of the strait. >>shepard: thank you from the pentagon. >> at least four people reported dead after a tour bus in israel spreads in what the prime minister has already called "an iranian terror attack." the explosion happened at a resort city in eastern bulgaria and tourists just arrived at the airport and a doctor at a hospital says more than two dozen people are wounded. no word on what caused the blast or who, specifically, was responsible, but the prime minister, binyamin netanyahu, says that all signs point to iran, and he warned that israel will react strongly. >> new hope for people trying to lose weight. for the second time in a month the food and drug administration is now approving a weight loss drug. many doctors consider it "the most effective," of its kind, and in testing patients on the drug lost up to 11 percent of their total body make. we are told the pill suppresses appetite, makes users feel full, and targets brain signals to stop overeating. the rules require that the drugmaker to conduct long-term studies on possible heart defects but the cost of those could pale in comparison to the profits that are possible here. analysts estimate that pill sales could top $1 billion over just the next several years. and now, gerri anchors the wills report on the fox business network. why is it so hard for the food and drug administration to approve these? >>guest: because they can cause problems with the heart. they have not approved a long term weight loss since 1999. >>shepard: and two approved in a month? gear doctors are putting the pressure on, 35 percent of americans, 78 million americans have a weight problem, and they are worried about that and there is lots of pressure to bring a diet drug to market because that's the magic pill. $1 billion in sales the first few years and this stock is on fire. going up 11 percent today, up over 52 week period, the magic drug the companies look for. >>shepard: we can hope and you can check with your doctor. >>gerri: limited issuance only to obesity specialists and could be hard to get early in the days. >>shepard: where or without weight loss drugs many of us do not get enough exercise and research shows our laziness could be killing millions of us each year. details on that coming up. and a company taking on the f.b.i. in court. >>shepard: a phone company is take the f.b.i. to court after they sent a secret letter demanding they turn over customer records. in what could become one of the biggest legal fights over the aspect of the patriot act. that counterterrorism law passed in the bush administration expanded the government's ability to collect information about its own citizens. now the "wall street journal" which our parent company owns, reports that after the phone company challenged the national security letter, the justice department filed its own civil complaint accusing the company of interfering with the united states seven interests. court documents by the "wall street journal" did not reveal the name of the phone company and the executive business editor of "wall street journal" joins us now. >> this is interesting, isn't it? there is a story in today's paper and it is about how much the f.b.i. should be allowed to go to a phone company and say we need the reports and the phone company hands them over but this company said we are not handing them over, this aspect of seching for data needs to have a court involved, a court needs to make the decisions and the f.b.i. should not be allowed. >>shepard: so, what's the next step? >>guest: well, the court will have to decide whether or not there is merit to the case. the company is saying, look, we are not even allowed to talk about this publicly with a gag order when the national security leters are delivered to a company so we cannot talk about it or go to court. manage is wrong. the fbi says, wait, that's not fair. what we are after is information in the interests of national security, and if you relieve the gag order on this, the target of our investigation, they may find out. we don't want the gag order released. the court will have to decide what to do. >>shepard: you knew the patriot act would come under repeated attack, but you have to have quite a set to take the f.b.i. to court? >>guest: there has been no phone company that has done this up until now. there has been some sort interaction, some protests but there hasn't been a company that has, really, challenged this. and that's why this is interesting. after the patriot act, the f.b.i. got additional powers, essentially, more flexibility, to issue the national security letters and that is when some of the phone companies pushed back. >>shepard: phone companies pushed back and when the people fine out what is going on down here it could get more interesting. >>guest: and there are a lot of people that say we need to have the powers at the hand of law enforcement to go after terrorists but how much is too much? and this particular company is saying, this is too much. you have to have a grand jury or some legal equivalent saying, it is time for a company to actually hand over data. >>shepard: you know, anna anna-sigga is with us, and mercedes is here, and there was always analogy on 9/11 someone just, boom, hit pendulum at the bottom of the clock and it has been swinging back and forth with great flow for a long time and right now we are at a place they are trampling on our liberties and freedom and they thing in the name of "security," they can do any damn thing they want. they can feel us up. tap or phones. fly drones over the house. people are worried about big government, they say, but no one complains about this stuff. it is insanity. >> absolute power corrupts absolutely. that is what we have. there is a reason why there is a separation of powers. the executive branch. the legislative branch. and the judiciary branch. they are the watch dog. if this court order is unreasonable, the court can step in and say you are not going to comply with nsl phone call, it is not permissible under the law. they are the watch dog. this law in particular is constraining the watch dog. >>shepard: we want them to get the terrorists too but we don't want them to take away all this country has given us by way of our creator. >>guest: this is not doing that. also, to go to the extremes of saying that everything has to be in the open all time unfortunately that will lead to more death and we have to be cognizant of that. this is to protect our citizens, each of us, it is not asking for everything, it is not asking if content, it has to be certified, that this is something that is needed to conduct an investigation that particularly is affecting counter trim, or terrorism. these letters have already broken up terror cells. would anyone want us to be in the position of not being able to do that. >>shepard: they could send someone contract government to sleep if the house with all of discuss they would know what everyone is doing and get rid of all the crime and we could also make the speed limit on the interstate five miles per hour. then no one would die in car wrecks. there is a lot the government can do on this if they want. can they seem to be getting there. >> more on the quickly deteriorating situation in syria. should we seek a last minute help from the united nations or will bashar al-assad will able to rally his own troops? and what will russia do? are you receiving a payout from a legal settlement or annuity over 10 or even 20 years? call imperial structured settlements. the experts at imperial can convert your long-term payout into a lump sum of cash today. the calcium they take because they don't take it with food. switch to citracal maximum plus d. it's the only calcium supplement that can be taken with or without food. that's why my doctor recommends citracal maximum. it's all about absorption. >>shepard: this is "studio b" at bottom hour and time for the tonight news. the syrian civil war that is resulted in the deaths of more than 17,000 men and women and children, escalated today with a bombing that killed three very high ranking syrian officials. and the united nations security council has responded, now, with a delay on a vote on a possible security council resolution. russia and china have not once but twice free vetoed the resolutions designed to stop the blood shed. the white house says they are running out of time. the special envoy to sear, kofi annan, reportedly requested the united nations delay the vote in an effort to get the russians on board with the rest of the security council. >> and jonathan hunt is like at theys for us this afternoon. still hopelessly divided or are the russians coming around, do we know? >>reporter: well, there has been so much talk here at the u.n. on syria over the past 12 months, or so, and so little action, and that looks unlikely to change. a vote has now been scheduled, tennively, for 10:00 a.m. tomorrow morning on the british sponsored u.s. backed resolution which will threaten the syrian regime if they do not agree to kofi annan's peace plan but russia is not coming around and the russians are still likely to do so and we will be back at square one. president obama spokesman charge any said the time is running out for the international community to take action. listen. >> all i can tell you it reflects the fact that the situation is getting more violent each day and syria and it only proves a point we have been making that the window is closing and we need to take action. >>jonathan: you heard at top of the show the white house comments on where president bashar al-assad could be and they simply have nosame situati. no diplomats here at the u.n. seem to have any idea right now where the president of syria is and that could be vital. if he is a about to or has already gone into hiding, the collapse of the regime could come about very quickly. but, on that note you are five different middle east analysts what is going to ask next, and you will get five different answers. >>shepard: what is the level of concern that bashar al-assad and his troops will use chemical weapons? >>jonathan: the real level of concern is great, and it is growing, and it is not just a question of whether the president himself might use those chemical weapons but what would happen to them if and when the assad regime falls. who, then, gets their hands on them? at the moment, the u.s. officials are very concerned, indeed, as evidenced by comments by defense secretary pa panetta early today. >> they have a responsibility to safeguard their chemical sites. and we will hold them responsible should anything happen with regard to those sites. this is something that we and our allies working very closely together to ensure that they fulfilling their responsibilities to effectively secure these chemical sites. >>jonathan: but chemical weapons are just one of the issues here, shep, if we are approaching the end game in syria. the other questions are, iran, al qaeda, what do both of those do if the assad regime collapses? there is also hezbollah across the boarder in lebanon, and there are so many issues not just if syria itself but across the entire region that will suddenly spread if and when the assad regime really collapses. >>shepard: thank you, jonathan hunt. and now continuing with michael singh the managerring washington at d.c. think tank and was special assistant to condoleeza rice and colin powell. thank you, michael. are we really in a different place today after this bombing at the heart of the government and the death of high rankers? >>guest: we are. these guys who were assassinated were key regime insiders especially and their loss represents a real blow to the assad regime and you will start to see potentially more defections people in the arm forts see the writing on the wall. >>shepard: so, from your experience with bashar al-assad, does he when pinned in the corner, come out and say, i give up? or launch something worse? >>guest: well, it is possible he is looking for a way for get through this. and you have seen the regime putting forward a face that, you know, this is not a panic situation, they put new defense and interior ministers into place, and, he will be, ago for a lifeline and what he chooses to do, whether he chooses to activate the military in a more serious way, or whether he lashes out in lebanon, or with his chemical weapons, that is if part depending on the messages we in the international community are sending right now, and so now is the time if you are going to say to assad, leave or face very dire consequences, now is the time to send that message. >>shepard: does anyone offer him a lifeline? live, stop the killing, get out we give you some sort of, something? >>guest: well, that is probably, this is the time to do that to say why don't you glee and go into exile rather than fight to the death and stretch this thing out in damascus with all the consequences that will have. and the last thing you want to do is offer him something which kind of presses the "pause" button and causes momentum against him to stop. >>shepard: now is the time to apply pressure and i am guessing that the time to do whatever the heck you can with the russians. >>guest: well, that is right, shep, but i would not be optimistic the russians will change their position too much. their position is aimed at preventing the united states from having a rehand in determining what comes next in syria and then russia's influence fading in this region. and, also, the other thing, what jonathan was talking about which is not only ensuring assad goes but starting to think about post assad, preventing a bloodbath and the proliferation of weapons that we saw africa deaf fell in libya. >>shepard: and preventing that part of the world from getting another enemy in this part of the world. >> and updates throughout the evening. our inactive lifestyle is killing as many people as smoking cigarettes. how much exercise do we really immediate? and how bad is it that so many of us are not getting it? >> the guy who stole a commercial airliner, slammed it into a bunch of cars before killing himself, how could he steal an airliner? security questions. i ta insulin, so i test... a lot. do you test with this? freestyle lite test strips? i don't see... beep! wow! that didn't ta much blood. yeah, and the unique zipwik tab targets the blood and pulls it in. so easy. yep. freestyle lite needs just a third the blood of onetouch ultra. really? so testing is one less thing i have to worry about today. great. call or click today and get strips and a meter free. test easy. riverside exit, i-95. variante ascari, monza. mile 7, highway 1. wehrseifen, nurburgring. the horseshoe, twin peaks boulevard. every famous cue has an equally thrilling, lesser-known counterpart. conquer them, with the lexus is performance line, featuring the is 250. real performance demands real precision. this is the pursuit of perfection. >>shepard: get off the couple. the laziness is killing you. a lack of exercise leads to as many deaths as smoking. five million people around the world die every year of laziness. researchers found a third adults do not get enough physical activity, one if three not getting enough. and they say that results in deadly health problems including heart disease, diabetes and cancer. with us is our doctor from columbia university medical center. >>guest: less than 4 percent of americans walk to work and less than 2 percent of people ride to work and unfortunately physical activity is linked with heart disease, diabetes, and surprisingly many people do not realize the link between inactivity and breast cancer and inactivity in colon cancer. and this study was published in a reputable journal and they looked at 122 countries, 33 researchers and unfortunately, the western countries and high income earners are the ones that are the worst at doing any kind of activity. >>shepard: the recommendations change all time. what is the recommendation now, how much exercise, grown man or grown woman? >>guest: good question. different doctors give different advice but the key is cardiovascular exercise at least 20 minutes three time as week to raise your heart rate, and we know it is not just about activity but also about eating healthy diet and maintaining a good weight, and stress reduction so this study was looking at inactivity but there are compounding factors with blood sure legal and obesity and weight control so it is looking at the big picture not just inactivity. >>shepard: there are older people not audience who are saying, look, it is 100 degrees outside, i can't do anything, but, if you live in a down with a mall or you can walk around your living room, helping yourself. >>guest: well it is easy to make excuses cannot do exercise but you have to start with small amounts and you can take the stares rather than the elevator and walk briskly to work, the study shows that even moderate exercise such as brisk walking have a benefit. you do not have to go to the gym but governments need to look at making exercise more affordable and more convenient for people but we always have an excuse. >>shepard: it is not just to make you feel better but to save your life and that is hard to impress. >>guest: the study shows looking at diabetes and smoking and lots of risk factors but 9 percent of deaths were preventable in 2008 thought to be related to physical inactivity. >>shepard: get off the couple. walk to work. >>guest: or stay away from the elevator. >>shepard: not if you are 100 and it is 90 degrees outside. >>guest: the study does show that some people obviously are not physically able to do exercise because of disability and that is a very small percentage of people. >>shepard: doctor, thank you. >>guest: thank you. >>shepard: after cops pulled over justin bieber for driving way over the speed limit this month the pop star blamed the press, and, now, a photographer may actually face charges in connection with the high speed case. that is weird looking. it is all weird to me. what do i know? 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[ female announcer ] live the regular life. phillips'. >>shepard: a decade after the attacks of 9/11 some people on the no-fly list can still go through flight training here in the united states according to a new government report. the focus of an important homeland security hearing today. trace is like on the west coast. it seems like a lot of loopholes to plug. >>trace: all foreigners are given full criminal background checks and screened against terror want lists but united states citizens are not given the same scrutiny. they can certainly fly their own private planes. listen, now, to this back-and-forth between chairman of the house homeland security committee and the general accountability office. >> sir, isn't it true that based on your report the transportation security administration cannot assure the american people that 14 terrorists are not in this country learning to fly airplanes. yes-or-no? answer: at this time, at this time, no. >>trace: before anyone get as pilot's license they would undergo some kind of a background check but experts say that terrorists do not need to get the pilots license they just need to learn to fly the plane. >>shepard: after the stolen plain incident a lot of reports have said they are concerned about securing their fences, et cetera. >>trace: but t.s.a. does not require any airports to have full time surveillance of the perimeter fence. that is up to each individual airport. the recommendation is for every mile of perimeter fence you are supposed to have ten observers but yesterday, at st. george they had six mile perimeter and one police officer kind of patrolling the grounds. the planes are not locked there is in ignition, in key to the ignition is if you know what you doing you can get in and fire one up. former director says it comes down to money for airports. listen. >> we spend it on perimeter defense? do we spend it on upkeeping the upkeep of the runway? where did you spend limits dollars? they will look at perimeter defense say, listen, was it adequate? but i'm not sure there is a lot more than can be done without a significant application of funds >>trace: had that suspect gotten in the plane and got it airborne, 4,500 gallons of fuel carried on there at 500 miles per hour. a flying bomb. >>shepard: and now the lawyers, can you not prevent everything. a loaded question like, can the t.s.a. assure us that there is in foreign terrorists, you can not assure anyone anything. >> you are right. >>shepard: and we cannot stop everything. things will happen we need to stop freaking out. >>guest: it is, one step ahead. who is a step ahead? we have to keep trying our best but can you not prevent everything. >>shepard: but don't bankrupt us along the way. >> photographer could face charges for getting into a high speed chase with that justin bieber guy. he was traveling 80 in 65 but the city council says he was doing 100, and the sing are said someone was face him and a few minutes after he was pulled he called the 9-1-1 and cops gave tmz the call. >> i have, like, five cars following me. >> do you know the people? >> no, i don't. i think they are, they are driving reckless. >> what=ñ is your last name? >> johnson. >> you are on the southbound 130 -- 101? >> yes. >> what kind of car are you in? all fister. >> what kind car is that? >> it is a fister. >>shepard: a plug in sports car and the bake costs $102,000 and cops spotted the second car speeding behind, well, johnson's fisker but did not stop the other car. california highway promise investigated and the los angeles attorney could file charges against one photographer. if the case goes to court it would be the first of its kind since the law when on to the books prohibited anyone from driving wreck misally while trying to take a photograph. and the legal panel is back. anna-sigga, i don't know, it seems right. >>guest: they should be charging. there is a reason this law is on the book, whether you get the justin bieber craze, the press are a problem, and we all remember what happened with princess dianna way back years ago, and to think that he got a ticket, as he should have, westbound verify, why don't they? they are creating the situation. he should not have continued driving fast but they like the laws to false imprisonment. people in the public eye, they expect to be bothered, they 1:00 o'clock people to talk to them and get their autograph but there are limits and the press for the sake of the shot and they get tons of money, sometimes town $1 million they will do everyone and it is not just justin bieber but all of us. let's charge them. >> beiber babes i don't get. with respect to bieber there is a lot evidence that he has the need for speed. so, there is factual evidence that will come forward and witnesses will say from the start he could have been going 100 miles per hour, we don't know, the people will come forward and say i am not sure he was being stalked. we do not know but i agree with anna, if there is evidence to show that there is someone else involved in reckless driving by all means you have to go forward but right now all we know is bieber has a reputation for speed and we have to focus on him. >>shepard: johnson. >>guest: that is right, johnson. in the fisker. >> crowds can't bake bread and neither can crows so what were a team of them doing dragging a bag of flour down the street? i. ...more talk on social security... ...but washington isn't talking to the american people. [ female announcer ] when it comes to the future of medicare and social security, you've earned the right to know. ♪ ...so what does it mean for you and your family? [ female announcer ] you've earned the facts. ♪ washington may not like straight talk, but i do. [ female announcer ] and you've earned a say. get the facts and make your voice heard on medicare and social security at earnedasay.org. >>shepard: then there is this: a white powder scare prompting a huge response, after someone called in a substabs and an intersection was shut down. a witness showed up to explain what was going on and the powder was white flour and the culprit? a couple of crows. the witness said she was out for a jog and she noticed the birds dragging a bag of flour and she took the bag and tossed it in the rash and kept running and a spokesman summed it up this way: two crows and a two alarm

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