comparemela.com



pulled a gun and shot and killed him. the details of coarse course of what we hope to get some sort of explanation from the prosecutor. all along it's been only one eyewitness to the event. and that is george zimmerman himself. who has said he was acting in self-defense. and he was relying on florida's stand your ground law to basically say, he should not be charged. and of course, the sanford police department and the state attorney here agreed with that initial assessment. but then we saw quite an outpouring of anger and really a demand for reexamination. so the governor of florida appointed a special prosecutor and that takes us to where we are today. she is going to announce at 6:00, according to our colleague pete williams, who has sources in theaw7$i federal government have been appraised of this. she will announce charges. we're not sure what charges will be. we know it won't be on the table is first degree murder. that is because it would require a grand jury to bring that indictment and angela corey chose not to go to grand jury, but rather it make the decision herself. so it could be aggravated battery. it could be manslaughter. i could run a gamut of charges. i think it is best to wait and see what she will announce. at the same time in the last 25 to 36 hours, we have learned from a team who were his attorneys, those two former attorneys, who resigned, saying that they couldn't find george zimmerman. he had left the state. he was not in contact with them. and so, during the proceeding hours and now days, there was a fair amount of concern among trayvon martin's family that in the event that there were charges brought, that he would be a flight risk. that they wouldn't know where he is. i've spoken to florida department law enforcement sources who tell us they are confident and calm. they won't say specifically they know where he is. but they are confident. so i will draw some conclusion that if there is a charge here, they will take him into custody. and dylan, it is highly likely, as i talk to you right now, that he has already been arrested and already in custody. ultimately he will be brought to jail here in seminole county in florida. >> let's bring in our legal analyst, savannah guthrie, kendall coffey is with us as well. former prosecutor and attorney job jamie floyd. savannah, i willç start with y here on the set. we will get into the analysis and the charge. and what does it say about us as a country that we have these -- all these layers of hypocrisy and layers of unresolvedish 50us that manifest in this situation which we will get to and spend time on. not only today for rightly so for some months to come. right now, what's happening? where is george zimmerman? what what's going to happen through the next five or six hours? walk ne through the next 46 hours. >> the prosecutor undertook her own investigation. she decided not to go by the grand jury. but file charges on her own. as pete williams reported, we are expecting charges. >> we will get that at 6:00. here is the piece of paper. here is the charge. >> it a charging document. that sets a series of event into course. >> what with george zimmerman. >> first thing is arrest. >> okay, i'm under arrest and in jail. >> first they have to find him. >> now or at 6:00. >> once the information is filed it could be filed this afternoon. she has to go to the courthouse and file it. >> it could be done right now. >> they could be in the process of picking him up for all we know. the real question is what charges will she file. top charge is expect degree murder. manslaughter is a possible charge. as is aggravated assault. the more lenient charge the more dissatisfied the family members of trayvon martin would be. >> that's where i want it bring jamie and kendall in. kendall, i will start with you. let's go with the only facts that we know. we know who that there are two individuals, one of them was unarmed, one of them armed. one of them killed the other one. no one contests that. weç know that a charge in association with that is about to be filed and we know that context of the charge that is going to be filed is riddled with controversy for a litany of reasons that make a heck of an awful lot of sense and need a lot more answers that we have right now. what -- through that lens, how do we interpret a charge in this situation? and at what point am i to the -- to the degree of which i'm offended by a miscarriage of justice in the undertaking that we're witnessing from its outset, or a dysfunction in our justice system. not a miss courage is the wrong word. it's not complete. but a disfunction in the process. what charge to you or what type of charge would be indication of trend towards a more functional just civic court system, if you will? >> well, i think the charge that is most likely is manslaughter. and i think you can also look it see perhaps charges of assault with a deadly weapon, battery with a deadly weapon. but to charge second degree murder here, the most aggressive charge it seems possible, i think it would be risky strategy because at some point, the country is divided about this. the community is divided about it. it is not all go out and arrest trayvon martin. at some point the attorneys former attorneys for zimmerman, are trying to very hard it play sympathy cards. but if he is overcharged here. if someone says it was a classic murder as opposed to vigilante that got out of control and committed manslaughter, there could be push back. and we can all think of a number of cases. casey anthony being the most prominent. maybe overcharged and maybe that back fires.ç expect manslaughter, expect assault and battery charges. that's where the court and prosecution will be. >> jamie kendall is talking about hysteria, right, morally right, a righteous position. it is not a position, the hysterical position on either side, for or against it, one that i personally would like to have my justice served inside of. i was of the belief that i live inside of a country where regardless of the given hysteria to kill or not kill me, to prosecute me or not prosecute me, that there was some basic metric of evidence collection and survey and required evidence. in that context of some kind, such that generally speaking the way a given american is treated. wli whether i charge them is not due to hysteria and in some ways it makes me most anxious. not to whether or not george zimmerman did it or not. i wasn't there. i think it sin sane to let someone shoot like that. but now we say we are charging because we are hysterical which makes me equally as nervous. >> there is history and hysteria. you talked earlier quite rightly, dylan, about the dysfunction of our criminal justice system. the basic fact is that when the victim is black, it doesn't matter what color the perpetrator is, when the victim is black, the result in the criminal justice system is very often an acquittal. >> for the perpetrator. in additionbputting one out of three black men in jail. >> i meng that because the charging prosecutor has to think about that when she makes her determination about how to prosecute m th. now, mr. coffey is correct that generally we charge up. so you would charge murder one. when thinking about whether you want the jury to compromise] down to murder two or in florida that's depraved calculation. de ity in florida. so it doesn't go there. but you try 20 get to man one from murder one. so you won't dough that here. because she knows she is dealing with a very different kind of case. as you point out, hysteria and history are at play in this case. in a way they aren't in most cases. so i agree with mr. coffey. that here she is probably going to look at manslaughter one. and maybe some of those other charges. assault with a deadly weapon. and maybe aggravated assault. we don't have all of the facts dylan, nor should we. because this is a case that should be tried as you are sult suggesting dylan, in the courtroom, not in the court of public opinion. but we have already tried it, haven't we, over the courts of the last da the -- >> well, savannah be, the thing that strikes me, is emotionally how viscerally it strikes at me individually. and i think a lot of people through the lens of two sets of rules. that this is one of the most piercing and heart wrenching examples of a sense that we live in a society where your identity, your role inç societ has a huge impact on mundane things, like what your tax rate is, to this. which is at the apex, how valuable is this person's life, and how valuable is that? do you agree with the assertion that this charge has to be a charge that will stick and has to be a charge that speaks to some sense of a validation for justice in it country. not that i say justice is convicting or not convicting. but procedurally -- i just can't imagine that a young blonde female that was killed and unarmed, that there wasn't at least a charge against a murder. i can't imagine an old rich guy on park avenue randomly shot, there would not at least be a a charge. >> that's why this is a tinder box. and there is so much riding on the justice system. in the early hours, it appeared to fail this young man. the defendant here was given the benefit of the doubt that allot of observers think that if the situation were reversed, he would not otherwise would have gotten. so it was important for this justice system to now work. you have to have some sympathy for the special prosecutor who has taken on what is kind of an unwinnable situation, no matter what happens here. sounds like she is going to file charges. then we will have an in all likelihood a jury trial. there is no telling what happens here. say what you will about it th case, it is not a slam dunk in terms evidence. there is conflicting(çevidence. in our system, the tie goes to the accused. innocent until proven guilty. if the proof isn't there beyond all reasonable doubt. so you take the next steps and figure out what happens if he is charged, what about eye acquittal, there would be outrage. >> kendall wab jamie, last word from each of you as we head around the horn. put yourself in the special prosecutor's chair, in the context of the conversation we just had, history and hysteria, you want to create a sense that the judicial system is not as dysfunctional as many believe. at the same time you must ignore the hysteria and actually administrate within some unified set of rules that can be advocated around, even if we can't live by it. how dot make the charges, kendall? >> bottom line is there is a very big difference between righteous prosecution and easy prosecution. i think she believes in her heart, in her mind, this is a righteous prosecution. chips will fall where they may. >> jamie? >> and i think she is a righteous prosecutor, accordinging to her history, if you look at it. there is also a big difference between reasonable suspicion to arrest and proof beyond reasonable doubt, getting back it savannah's point. there is a presumption of innocence in this country. she has to take the longview. what happens if she takes it to trial and there is acquittal. she has to charge very carefully based on the fact she's got.ç let's hope she does that. >> lets thank you for the conversation. kendall, a pleasure to see you. jamie, you as well. throughout the evening, including the announcement of the charges by the prosecutor, which will happen less than two hours from now at 6:00 eastern time. next up here, however, during hour, as if gas prices aren't already bad enough, some world leaders at least talking about an issue that world leaders created to solve the banking issue a few years ago. the skyrocketing price of food and the illusion that we don't know why that is. plus, loved, hated, but never ignored, the untold story of one of the world's most influential cities. and we're not saying that just becaused we're based here in the big apple. all eyes on mitt. yes, santorum officially dropped out, or as he called it, winning. we no longer what v to pretend there race for the gop nomination. and as far as parties and identities are concerned, for the presidency, mano a mano. right now, romney has a lot of work to do. >> the president's campaign slogan was hope and change. i think that's changing now to let's hope for a change. all right.ç >> maybe descent material in a friendly room. but it doesn't work well on intrade. on the other side, democrats continue to push their so-called buffet rule, a profoundly morally righteous and appealing political posture. and utterly irrelevant to every one of our issues, not the least of which is deficit. >> i'm not the first president to call for this idea that everybody's got to do their fair shares. wild eyed class taking action was ronald reagan. he thought the wealthiest should pay their fair share and he said so. we could call it the reagan rule. >> rhetoric is brilliant if only it had any math mathematical relevance. you are inspire bid this politics, encouraged by anything that you see? is it transparent enough to at least know it is tom foolery. >> well, this is about whether contraception should be allowed. >> progress. >> so the pivot as p were can be romney now going out and pivoting to the women vote. i he is talking to female business leaders in delaware np in hartford, connecticut, speaking to female entrepreneurs. he is figuring out he lost the women's vote. >> had to be the birth control thing. >> and he is talking about business and we are talking about jobs. that is at least on theç right- >> so rop cox glass half full image of lloyd weather. the policies pay be impotent or hallow. but at least we are not talking about birth control and who is on mars. >> it is bad when i say, wake me up on may 7. >> it's not bad. we will just ship you back to london for a few months. >> not bad there. and politicians trying to do buffet rules. here is the things with politicians everywhere in the world, in the uk and here in the u.s. they may win or lose, probably from factors outside their control. the euro could well derail president obama ae reelection hope. big problems with spain this week. there is problem with oil. when it comes down to it, the economy might be outside of obama's and romney's control. >> intriguing jonathan. you have the interma sift political culture, political campaign rhythms, how these things go. seven months, a heck of a long time, two candidates with this level of implies volatility between social challenges and geo-political challenges. do you believe either candidate -- how much control does either candidate have on whether they can win or lose this election, considering the exposure just referenced? >> they have no control. the best thing they can do, dylan, think of it this way. you have mitt romney and barack obama in the front seat of one of those wild and crazyç rolle coasters with no lap bar, no harness, no anything. just the handle bar in the front to hang on. and hope that they're not flung out of that front car. when people go into the voting booth in november, they're going to be thinking about a few things. gas prices, do i have a job. do i feel that the economy is coming back? do i feel that person that incumbent is someone i should stick with or should i take a chance, should i risk changing leaders and put in this other person. what we're going to have over the next seven months is a lot of posturing and talking about a whole lot of things that may or may not happen. this discussion of the buffet rule, you think that's really going to happen in the next seven months? what it really is, is a proxy conversation about mitt romney's taxes. so while the buffet rule people might like it from a righteous point of view and it might be one of many things that need to be done to change the way things are done in terms income and equality and tax fairness, but really what this is about is talking about the opponent and what he may or may not be hiding in his tax returns from the last 20-some odd years. >> if you talk about the buffet rule, then you are basically begging everybody to take a look at mitt romney's taxes to see how he would fair under the buffet rule. wonderful analysis. thank you, jonathan. i enjoyed your analysis as well rb rob. be careful, here. we know it was very impressive, actually. anyway, back with the panel in a few minutes. but today the u.n.ç general assembly is finally debating something we have been covering on the dr show for years. going back to the decision to print trillions of dollars to cover up the hole in our banking system. the side effect of which has been escalation in food prices. much like with things like oil and gold, market speculation fueled by years of central bank policy of endless money printing, has created globally a massive stretch in the cost of food. the average american spends about 13% of their income at the grocery store so we feel it. but we have wiggle room. but not just an american issue. it's a global one. and everyone needs to eat everyday. obviously, it is the poorest among us who are the least politically remember represented. those billions of people and families in an industrial countries pay, i guess 10% of their money on food. but for those who are the least considered, in developing countries, their food spike is as high as 80% in response to our central bank's money printing and world's money printing to cover up the debt pri crisis that they don't want to deal with tp fred kaufman is from the school of journalism. he spoke about this today at the united nation. it is also the topic of his upcoming book, how foodç stopp being food. due out in september. professor, some of the finest minds on wall street, immediately started piling into gold, oil, metals, copper et cetera, and soft o commodities they call it. food, pork, wheat, grains. what do you mean when you say, when food stops being food? >> dylan, you've got a exactly right. this is all about currency tp food has been completely financialized. and this started really in about 1991 when goldman sachs first came out with the commodity index fund. since then we have had untold speculation in the sectors. but i think the point we are trying to make is beneath the speculation lies weakness in the actual currency and in the monetary supply. you would think that maybe an artificially weak dollar, which is what is happening, would translate into an artificially strong other currencies, which might have a zero some game in the sense that commodities is priced in dollars. we have the same buying power. but the underlying weakness led to a wall street perception of opportunity and so we have seen extreme volatility and more than 200 million people driven into starvation. they're not a buffer dylan. we cannot use 200 million of earth's people and now about a billion hungry people on earth, they are not a buffer for currency spending and speculation. >> now the highest level of the central bank, up to the highest levels of the european bank, highest levels of the bank of japan, highest levels of the bank in frankfurt, all ofç tho executives are willing implicitly or explicitly, they create end continue to advocate a policy of central banking, that they have deemed as a necessary environment to preserve the too big to fail banks and that a biproduct of that collateral damage if you will, is depriving a few hundred people that none of us have ever met in new york with food spp that unfair? >> this is more than unfair. it is unconscionable. it is one thing for the price of oil to be where it is. artificially stuck up. but now we have commodities since they have all been financialized, moving together in a suite. so you know, the price of oil one thing but the price of grains, live stock, price of edible oils, this is what drives people into hunger. what he we are looking at is the end to democratic regimes. hungry people, dylan, are angry people. >> walk me through how many people -- how much information do we actually have? what do we know? what is the survey opinion and how many people have gone without how much food for how long? >> we have these really we understood hunger. a problem. we understand this in the late 1970s. we have the green revolution. all of these enputs, fertilizers and irrigations. people gradually trend lower until-)ç3n?i?; we still unconscionableabunconscionably high. we still have 170 million hungry my mother froze everything. i was 18 years old before i had my first fresh bun. the invention that i came up with is the hot dog ez bun steamer. steam is the key to a great hot dog. i knew it was going to be a success. the invention was so simple that i knew i needed to protect it. my name is chris schutte and i got my patent, trademark and llc on legalzoom. [ shapiro ] we created legalzoom to help people start their business and launch their dreams. go to legalzoom today and make your business dream a reality. at legalzoom.com, we put the law on your side. an accident doesn't have to slow you down... with better car replacement, available only from liberty mutual insurance, if your car is totaled, we give you the money to buy a car that's one model-year newer... with 15,000 fewer miles on it. there's no other auto insurance product like it. better car replacement, available only from liberty mutual. it's a better policy that gets you a better car. call... or visit one of our local offices today, and we'll provide the coverage you need at the right price. liberty mutual auto insurance, responsibility -- what's your policy? i'm here to unleash my inner cowboy. instead i got heartburn. [ horse neighs ] hold up partner. prilosec isn't for fast relief. try alka-seltzer. it kills heartburn fast. yeehaw! talk about something that will capture amath nation. new york, new york. the city so nice they named it twice. or as the old saying goes, but as our specialist will tell us momentarily, it hasn't always bb so night. manhattan's history is riches, crime, terrorism, big money deals and back door politics. ups and downs which have mir ordered the trends in this country. greg bend has been a reporter in this city for 25 years and is author of the book "modern new york." he works as columnist for crane's new york business. a delight to have you here. you say new york is the most powerful, prosperous city in the world. is it in danger? if you look at the history of new york's ups and downs, can you read anything in the tea leaves of its cycles? >> yes. and it is in danger for two reasons. because wall street thrived through four booms and busts. >> nice to own the government. >> well for whatever reason you want it put it, wall street has found a way to be extraordinarily successful to be greed, greed has dominated wall street, as i'm sure everyone knows. but it's that greed which made new york so rich. >> are you saying that the fed turns off the money printers to save all those starving people and so it is either new york or starving? >> no, i -- >> this is terrible. >>ç i don't agree it is just about the money printing. it is about whether wall street will make a lot of money. they provided 28% of the income in fork city. >> i know. >> paid 13% of taxes. and 13% of city taxes. >> and and american paid 30 million to bail them out after they stucked the money out and paid taxes for us. go ahead, rob. >> presume that to be the case. setting aside any bailouts. what is going to suplant wall street? who will take new york? hong kong, london. >> well, when tokyo was going to dominate the world, we know where tokyo is today. it is not about the global issue. it is about whether as a country, because of dodd-frank, caps on compensation or this great anger at wall street, we just shrink wall street to something it was like in the 1980s. the rest of the country can hate wall street and i understand why, but wall street is what makes new york go. just look at steve schwarzman of blackstone. the epitome of greed, right? $400 million out of his ipo. his estate worth 2 or 3 million. but he kbafgave 100 million to york state library. or look at the social agencieses based on hedge funds -- >> so if i take 30 trillion i can wash push a few million off to green wash to steal no fr the government. we get to enjoy my rhetoric when i host the show. >> i will try and get over that the sid new york is better than london. do have you a favorite mayor own who do you think will replace bloomberg when he finally goes. >> well, traditional new york liberal who took over in 197. the city is at its worst. we lost 620,000 jobs. a million people fled new york. and this liberal came in and said, if i'm going to revive new york, i have to put the economy and business at the top of my priority list. that philosophy gov erped city hall ever since. but not one of the candidate running for mayor in democratic primary believe in that philosophy. they harkon back to the philosophy of john lindsay which is the economy and business is resource to address social and economic ills in this city. they represent a fundamental change and the philosophy that made new york what it is. >> jonathan, go ahead. >> greg, part mof my question i what role does governance play in being one of the keys of new york's success. i saw you had property, tourism, i think media was on there. but no mention of governance, which is one of the big things rudy giuliani ran on when he was mayor. about making the city more governable so it is attractive for business to come back to the city and turn things around. quite frankly, he was successful at that. >> that's absolutely true. and a decline in crime was enormously helpful to the growth in tourism in new york. but here is what i think about that. after rudy's election in ç1993 there was an enormous burs burst of optimism. i found a great quote from a story at that time which said the mayor is the chief mental health officer of the city. that's his role. and the other question to ask is, why was there not more panic in new york in 2008. like the terrible times in the '70s? because people had confidence that michael bloomberg would be a good mayor and get the city through. it is not about economic deals -- >> it is a confident country at the end of the day. >> it is about confidence and setting policies. >> thank you for being with us, greg. >> thank you for having me. >> thank you. big news from space, what does this -- where is it? there it is. what does that image look like to you? with the capital one cash rewards card you get a 50% annual bonus. and everyone likes 50% more cash -- well, except her. no! but, i'm about to change that. ♪ every little baby wants 50% more cash... ♪ phhht! fine, you try. [ strings breaking, wood splintering ] ha ha. [ male announcer ] the capital one cash rewards card. the card for people who want 50% more cash. ♪ what's in your wallet? ♪ what's in your...your... ♪ spread a little love my way ♪ ♪ spread a little something to remember ♪ ♪ ♪ spread a little joy... [ female announcer ] fresh milk and real cream. that's what makes philadelphia. ♪ so spread a little... [ female announcer ] and that's what makes the moment we enjoy it, a little richer. ♪ real belgian chocolate whipped with philadelphia cream cheese. new indulgence. the moment just got a little sweeter. on december 21st polar shifts will reverse the earth's gravitational pull and hurtle us all into space. which would render retirement planning unnecessary. but say the sun rises on december 22nd, and you still need to retire. td ameritrade's investment consultants can help you build a plan that fits your life. we'll even throw in up to $600 when you open a new account or roll over an old 401(k). so who's in control now, mayans? holding down the fort while you're out catching a movie. [ growls ] lucky for me, your friends showed up with this awesome bone. hey! you guys are great. and if you got your home insurance where you got your cut rate car insurance, it might not replace all this. [ electricity crackling ] [ gasping ] so get allstate. you could save money and be better protected from mayhem like me. [ dennis ] dollar for dollar, nobody protects you from mayhem like allstate. big news from space as nasa satellite orbiting mars captured an image of life on mars. kind of. a new photo from nasa appears to show a giant elephant profile etched into the red planet. take a look. see the trunk? floppy ear. the eye. you can see the eye. obviously that elephant is not actually a cousin of the animal we know here on earth. scientists think it is the result after slow-moving lava flow. this isn't the first time people have seen things on planet pictures. a phenomena called, that word. pareidolia. the martian bunny, take a look. a piece of the mars happy face. because who doesn't like to smile?ç most famous of all, the martian face first captured in 1976. but a image was found to be a martian mesa that looks a bit like this. sometimes technology takes all the fun out of science, doesn't it? next up here, beyond the battlefield, vets on a mission to change communities and organization helping more of them do it. you know, those farmers, those foragers, those fishermen... for me, it's really about building this extraordinary community. american express is passionate about the same thing. they're one of those partners that i would really rely on whether it's finding new customers, or, a new location for my next restaurant. when we all come together, my restaurants, my partners, and the community amazing things happen. to me, that's the membership effect. the day starts with arthritis pain... a load of new listings... and two pills. after a morning of walk-ups, it's back to more pain, back to more pills. the evening showings bring more pain and more pills. sealing the deal... when, hang on... her doctor recommended aleve. it can relieve pain all day with fewer pills than tylenol. this is lois... who chose two aleve and fewer pills for a day free of pain. and get the all day pain relief of aleve in liquid gels. ♪ why do you whisper, green grass? ♪ [ all ] shh! ♪ why tell the trees what ain't so? ♪ [ male announcer ] dow solutions use vibration reduction technology to help reduce track noise so trains move quieter through urban areas all over the world. together, the elements of science and the human element can solve anything. [ all ] shh! [ male announcer ] solutionism. the new optimism. but when she got asthma, all i could do was worry ! specialists, lots of doctors, lots of advice... and my hands were full. i couldn't sort through it all. with unitedhealthcare, it's different. we have access to great specialists, and our pediatrician gets all the information. everyone works as a team. and i only need to talk to one person about her care. we're more than 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. [ sneezes ] [ male announcer ] you may be an allergy muddler. try zyrtec® for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin® because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. zyrtec®. love the air. [ sneezes ] oh. let's go. from the crack, off the backboard. [ laughs ] dad! [ laughs ] whoo! oh! you're up! oh! oh! so close! now where were we? ok, this one's good for two. score! [ male announcer ] share what you love with who you love. kellogg's frosted flakes. they're gr-r-eat! well, we've dedicated significant time on this program to our defense energy project and get our vets back to work, especially in jobs creating energy efficiency and independence for america. if this is a mission close to your heart write it down. this nonprofit helps returning troops have a new sense of purpose by creating a transition for them in six-month projects. tab that, a mission continues fellow, and domenica, helping place members in the program, mica how does it help. >> hits's micah. >> micah, sorry. >> thankses. what it means is we challenge men and women veterans as they come back from personal military service to serve again in their hometown community. i love that way in which we offer this fellowship, six month fellowship where the veteran gets to serve with the assistanceç after living stipp at an organization of their choice. big brothers, big sisters. red cross. in tab that's case, green jobs. the results are amazing. there is a profound impact on the set ran, internally, professionally and an impact on the community. the change we are trying to make is to have society view these veterans as assets, because that's exactly what we are. >> tabitha, what did you like most about the program and to the extent of which others can learn to do what they are doing or get involved. why would you recommend they do so? >> i recommend that all post 9/11 veterans get into a program such as the mission continues, because it gives us a sense of purpose and giving back to the community. where as i once was -- i wasn't doing anything with myself and that's why i joined mission continues. >> and what did you do when you joined? >> i work at -- i'm a fellow at veteran's green jobs. through veteran's green jobs -- sorry. we help train vets and wild lands fire fighting and land conservation. train them in renewable energies. and stuff like that. >> micah, compare the wave of veterans returning. and the available resources and nature and quality and scale of the programs to help with the transition. >> right. so you know, how our fellowship works is essentially with exactly that. with that transition process. some fellows have transitioned as well. so basically through the challenge of service, it helps them reintegrate in their community. the mission continues, to the veteran, is thank you to the service. thank you for your service, but we still need you. >> i fully endorse, there's no question, what i'm trying to figure out is we have millions of veterans coming back. what percentage can go? all of them? >> so the three criteria for service is that you must have served after 9/11. right now we are accepting post 9/11 veterans only. you have to have an honorable or medical or equivalent discharge and least three years of service. >> if i have those three things i can do this? >> absolutely. give us a call. or you can go to our website missioncontinues.org and start applying for fell wowship progr. 122, is the number i got today, will start soon. >> you can handle a million even though you have 122 right now. >> the sky is the limit. we have exponential growth. in cities like new york and san diego, we are growing exponentially. these veterans are finding out about the fellowshipç and clamoring. and as well we should be. >> sensational news. again, missioncontinues.org. >> absolutely. >> missioncontinues.org. he says they have the capacity, they have the willingness and ability. check it out. we will put it on our properties. tell your friends about it. if you know a veteran bho who is looking for a place to begin upon tir return. this candidate a great place it help. coming up on "hardball," chris animal ues with up to minute details on the trayvon martin case and specifically the special prosecutors's upcoming indictment of george zimmerman, that's due at 6:00. first, users deserve a cut of the picture perfect payday and how long will the social media content producers for the fancy new companies let their content be sold off to wall street for billions of dollars for people that aren't them? n'te our retirement savings, not in this economy. we also have zero free time, and my dad moving in. so we went to fidelity. we looked at our family's goals and some ways to help us get there. they helped me fix my economy, the one in my house. now they're managing my investments for me. and with fidelity, getting back on track was easier than i thought. call or come in today to take control of your personal economy. get one-on-one help from america's retirement leader. the world needs more energy. where's it going to come from? ♪ that's why right here, in australia, chevron is building one of the biggest natural gas projects in the world. enough power for a city the size of singapore for 50 years. what's it going to do to the planet? natural gas is the cleanest conventional fuel there is. we've got to be smart about this. it's a smart way to go. ♪ in here, the landscaping business grows with snow. to keep big winter jobs on track, at&t provided a mobile solution that lets everyone from field workers to accounting, initiate, bill, and track work in real time. you can't live under a dome in minnesota, that's why there's guys like me. [ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪ that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm. for half the calories plus veggie nutrition. could've had a v8. power, precision, cutting edge the new lithium-powered worx g will save you time and effort. you'll never again hassle with mixing gas and oil. no more struggling with tangled extension cords. the powerful worx gt suast wiuh a simple touch of a button andm a powerful trimmer to a machine to a perfect cut every time. a clean, straight edge makes a big difference in the appearance of your yard. what makes us number one in motorcycle insurance? we love bikes. we love riders. and most of all, we love to ride. perfect hair every time. leading the pack in motorcycle insurance. now, that's progressive. call or click today. thanks, dale dylan. big tech story this week is facebook's purchase of instagram, photo sharing service, for $1 billion. it doesn't even use a website. just access it on your mobile phone. now days the computing experience moves from the desktop to laptop to mobile to google glasses. companies that have proven their appeal on the newest platform can sell for big bucks. good for them. but i do want it point out a problem with this business model which dill yn and i have discussed before. instagram did not sell its 13 employees for a billion dollars this week. it did not selç its photography software for a billion dollars. remember kodak just filed for bankruptcy this year and they are the ones who invented polaroids. now instagram's most valuable asset is you its customer base of 30 million people. and it just sold to you facebook. there's a famous internet saying that explains if you're not paying for it, you're not the customer, you're the product being sold. that's why instagram doesn't need revenue or eliberate business model. it has the legal rights to the photos of its users. some are getting upset. there is a big backlash to the sale. avenues was announced, one of the most common tweets was people unstalling the application. instagram users are fretting about facebook's outreach. good. the question is not whether we trust instagram more than facebook or whether this year's management is more responsible than next year's management. it is not about people or brand. i think it is about rules. the contracts that we sign with tech companies. and the fact is that instagram's contract, terms of use policy that you click on to use the service, is already really similar it facebook's. you want it give a couple exam. possess many both claim worldwide right to use display modify sell or delete your photos without compensating you in any way. and to use you and your information for advertisements without notice andç content. now if that's not bad enough, instagram already claims the power to change the contract you sign after you sign it and make you subject to those new changes. take a look at this. they say they reserve the right it alter the terms of use at any time. if they decides that's a material change, they will send you an e-mail. what's a material change? they determine that at their sole discretion using their reasonable judgement. so if instagram determines that any changes it makes are big enough, it'll e-mail you. but you don't have a say. while you could cancel your account, facebook claims the right to everything you already shared even if you delete your account. what is the way out of the hotel california rules sni think we got to force fairer different contract on the entire industry with either consumer act vit vice em or regulation and no, there's no act for this. >> we don't have the time. almost as if identified the cutting edge of our time. facebook used other people's content for $100 billion ipo. they will use that content to buy somebody else's businesses to who is making money selling other people's content. >> bingo. as i say, all this is bad enough. then they will change it on you any time they want and you have signed away to that. >> ten second regular lugs. >> you could have a very re version polic >> i own any content. >> you own it and you have to opt in to giving it away. >> you are you. >> i'm me. >> you own you. they don't own us. anyway, that does it for us p.m. i'm dylan ratigan. "hardball" is up right now with chris matthews.ç

Related Keywords

New York ,United States ,Japan ,Tokyo ,Australia ,Philadelphia ,Pennsylvania ,Florida ,Delaware ,Minnesota ,Seminole County ,California ,San Diego ,London ,City Of ,United Kingdom ,Connecticut ,Longview ,Hong Kong ,Belgium ,Spain ,Singapore ,Americans ,America ,Belgian ,American ,Kendall Coffey ,Steve Schwarzman ,George Zimmerman ,Trayvon Martin ,Kerry Sanders ,Ronald Reagan ,Michael Bloomberg ,Pete Williams ,Angela Corey ,A Martian Mesa ,Chris Schutte ,Jamie Floyd ,Savannah Guthrie ,Barack Obama ,Fred Kaufman ,Chris Matthews ,Dylan Ratigan ,Rudy Giuliani ,Casey Anthony ,Jamie Kendall ,John Lindsay ,Rop Cox ,Dale Dylan ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.