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just because of their race that we're able to come together to try to come up together with some good answers. >> over night a prayer vigil echoed by the president outside of the police quarters and now there is security in ferguson. amanda is live on scene in ferguson. amanda, there are more calls for the mayor of ferguson to offered to. where does that stand? >> reporter: hi toure. ferguson police chief thomas jackson has stepped down and calls are growing for the mayor to do the same. his term isn't up until 2016 and some aren't waiting until that long. and for now the city council seats are up for grabs and this is an important election next month. and senator claire mccaskill spoke of that today. >> there are new people running for office we're going to have three new council people in ferguson and i hope the people of ferguson realize this is the moment where you exercise the muscle of democracy and you vote and participate. that is the other thing that has gone on in many communities, folks haven't stepped up to be part of the government just consent to criticize the government. >> reporter: now, i attended a city council candidate forum last night where many concerned residents were worried about the fate of the ferguson police department in light of the scathing police department last week. and this was an event for residents to meet the candidates and half of the questions raised last night were how could city officials move forward and meant race relations in light of what happened. at the same time down the street there was the prayer vigil that you mentioned and there were about 100 people gathering and singing and chanting and it was peaceful and it wrapped up on a high night africa protest leaders said it was a successful night and they formally dismissed the crowd and to said to get some rest and get ready for the weekend. >> amanda sakuma in furgerguson, thank you. and some are adamant that the shooter that police with seeking was not them. >> i know many of you are convinced that whoever was the cause and the culprit last night they did not come from this community that has been standing for 200 days. >> we will stand united and seek change. i was very disappointed in the ferguson police department for blaming the violence on the protesters when the shooter had nothing to do with us. we stand for peaceful protest, we have been peacefully protesting since august. >> with us from ferguson jessica, managing editor of the local river front times. judging the entire group of protesters by the actions of the worst members of that group is problematic but that is what people across this country are doing today. so are people there upset that a few people maybe even one person, came to the protest, shot at police officers, and hijack hijacked the narrative and made it more about citizen violence than changing policing? >> i think a lot of people are upset. i think a term you are hearing is heart broken. it is one of the things you hear people saying these protesters want dead cops. i don't think that is true. i don't think anyone you are seeing out here night after night dedicated to the activist group wants dead cops. whoever wanted dead cops is whoever pulled that trigger. >> and your outlet is that protesters are upset about language from the st. louis county police chief saying that the shooters were quote, embedded with the protesters. what are you hearing from folks and what is the theory of the protesters in terms of who perpetrated this violence? >> you know the theories are all over the place. the street where this potentially happened tiffin this street that is a side street some people are suggesting it is a advantage street and it looks down on the police department and it is a great street to perpetrate that kind of act, and so some people are saying residents and others are saying rogue outsider. it is dangerous to make any assumptions with protesters or anyone, we really don't know who the person was. >> jessica, as you described the protesters and claire mccaskill had a message to the protesters you have a chance to make change and that is to go to the ballot box and including in the third ward, and look at how those are playing out right now and what are the prospects for change? >> it is tough to say. as amanda was just saying. there was a huge gathering of people wanting to hear the candidates and what they wanted to say and it was a diverse crowd and an older crowd and one of the younger people that i talked to if you were to vote right now and who would you vote for. and he said no one. i don't think anybody will help. and that is a bleak perspective for a political level but i think solutions or ideas are coming in all realms political and otherwise. >> as toure was mentioning earlier, there is pressure for the mayor of ferguson to offered to. governor ed rengel gave great vic, what would i do if i was mayor of ferguson meet in private, no press, meet with clerics and second i would add african-americans to my administration competent people not just because they are african-american and meet people with all colors meet every two weeks and hear any gripes and sit through every meeting and tell them what you would do and then do something about it. this is the way the mayor can change the way people think about him or he would have to offered to. >> i think he sets him up as a spokesperson for the city he speaks on behalf of the city manager who has resigned but who was the most powerful person in ferguson city government so he's sort of become a face of the city the mouth piece for the city government but it is a weak mayor system so i'm not sure how much he can personally do and in terms of his p.r. war or his p.r. stance it may be too late for him and just time for him to offered to. it is hard to say. >> jessica, we've seen significant change at the top of the food chain at the police department and the d.o.j. there demanding change and using their leverage. are we already seeing any changes in the way police work is happening on the ground in ferguson? >> you definitely saw it at last night's demonstrations. they definitely changed tactics. you saw the head lieutenant out there mingling with the crowd, not wearing riot gear and not the line of policemen with their shields up. trying to bring back the crowd interaction, the lighter touch. the spokesperson for the st. louis count police department told me -- or the county police department told me that was the strategy they tried to use in november. they are trying to bring it back now. so i think that at the demonstrations, that is what you are seeing. out in the community, i'm not exactly sure. because that is not county p.d. the missouri state patrol that is the local missouri officers and they are tight-lipped in how they are doing their jobs right. >> thank you for your time. the more we learn, the worse it gets. the new details in the secret service mishap. and the gop front-runners look to make a good first impression. abby knows how important that is in new hampshire. and ebola back in the news. a second american being flown to america. the latest on the health worker's condition. the cycle rolls on on friday march 13th. he just keeps sending more pictures... if you're a free-range chicken you roam free. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. it's what you do. ♪ two wheels a turnin'... ♪ so,as my personal financial psychic, i'm sure you know what this meeting is about. yes, a raise. i'm letting you go. i knew that. you see, this is my amerivest managed... balances. no. portfolio. and if doesn't perform well for two consecutive gold. quarters. quarters...yup. then amerivest gives me back their advisory... stocks. fees. fees. fees for those quarters. yeah. so, i'm confident i'm in good hands. for all the confidence you need. td ameritrade. you got this. this is the equivalent of the sugar in one regular can of soda. and this is a soda a day for a year. over an average adult lifetime that's 221,314 cubes of sugar. but you can help change that with a simple choice. drink more water. filtered by brita. ♪ and introducing our new advanced filter, now better than ever. female narrator: for over 60,000 california foster children a pair of shoes is a small but important gift. my shoes have a hole in them. i can barely fit in these anymore. i hope no one would notice. they hurt my feet. i never had new shoes before. to help, sleep train is collecting new shoes of all sizes. bring your gift to any sleep train, and they'll be given to a local foster child in need. not everyone can be a foster parent... but anyone can help a foster child. new details emerging in the latest black eye for the secret service. those two agents suspected of being under the influence when they struck a white house security barrier apparently drove through an active bomb investigation and right next to the suspicious package. the agents had been attending a go away parting at a bar a mile away before the incident. even though it happened last week the president and joseph clancy only learned about it this week. last night the house oversight committee called it simply unacceptable and lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are demanding answers when clancy when he testified next week. joining us now is lauren fox. lauren welcome. we love having you. and as i said joe clancy is going up to the hearing next week and this is his first big test as head of the secret service. why did it take him so long to learn about this and does this just speak to the challenge of the job that he's now in? >> certainly. i mean this secret service has been working through some of these issues since 2012 when during a trip to columbia allegations surfaced they brought prostitutes back to the hotel, questioned the service to the president. and now clancy has to go to capitol hill, now he's in this position why things have changed and that this car accident happened last week and that he just found out about it this week shows leadership problems as he moved forward. >> lauren stick with us gop front-runners are flocking to new hampshire this weekend. jeb bush is there taking part in a business round table. it is his first political trip to new hampshire in 15 years. scott walker also arrived today for his first trip to the granite state in the run-up as walker sits atop many of the polls. and i wanted to bring it to the table because i feel like i was just there in the 2012 election i lived at the hilton garden inn. and i fell in love with new hampshire and i think it is an important primary statement and it is important as candidates are showing themselves for the first time because the first impression. and voters are very smart and they have seen decades of candidates to come through because they know what is good and authentic and no matter how many endorsements you have you have to sit in their living rooms and connect with the people. and jeb bush and scott walker who are right now in a tight race, how will they connect with the voters in their living rooms. these voters are smart and will ask the tough questions, they will ask about foreign policy and a big one about immigration. >> this week is critical for jeb bush. he's at an important cross roads. they are looking to raise $100 million this quarter and when you talk to pollsters, jeb bush is not doing well. the latest poll is 34% of negative feelings and more positive. and scott walker is a negative net one and hillary clinton is a positive one. and charlie koch said jeb appears to have inherited negatives he didn't earn during his tenure as governor and he is being viewed as an extension of his brother. can jeb get out of the shadow of w. >> well scott walker is not a well-known candidate. even though his net negatives with smaller, he hasn't had a chance to introduce his name to voters. >> hasn't had a chance to mess up yet. >> well people don't know who he is. he is the governor of wisconsin and people aren't necessarily paying attention to him nationally yet. well as jeb bush has a family legacy that is very difficult to come out from under. >> someone else with a difficult family legacy is rand paul. his family brings a rabid fan base. but today he is speaking to buoy state in maryland and talking about criminal justice reform. and after mitt romney took a shilacking in 2012 the republican party looked within itself and decided in order to succeed in 2016 they need to reach out to communities of color better. we see paul trying to do that today. what is your sense of where the party is. is this a strategy others in the party will be emulating? >> the party senses this is something they should be doing. if we turn to capitol hill we've had very different votes offer immigration and that turns off some in the latino community but some like rand paul are going out and speaking with some that others haven't connected with over the last decade and that is trying to turn the tide here and other candidates will have to try to em you'll late that if they want to do better than the voters in 2012. >> 2016 is live and well today and lauren fox, thank you so much. >> you bet. thank you. >> lauren i had one more for you. you may have heard this week that a few of our republican friends decided that it would be a good idea to send a letter to the ayatollah of iran. >> what? >> the president just reacted to this letter. let's take a listen to what he had to say to vice news. >> i'm embarrassed for them. for them to address a letter to the ayatollah who they claim is our mortal enemy and their basic argument to them is don't deal with our president because you can't trust him to follow through on an agreement, that is close to unprecedented. >> so the president is embarrassed for them even some republicans seem to be embarrassed for their colleagues that signed on to this letter and we have rand paul marco rubio and ted cruz and lindsey graham and all who would like to be considered republican presidential contenders and whoever is likely to go up against hillary clinton and a lot of foreign policy crud and is this letter going to be a problem for them and showing voters they don't understand foreign policy and not ready for prime time. >> we have to remember this letter was a notice to base voters and rand paul is sending a letter to voters that says i'm tough on foreign policy and i don't agree with the president on foreign policy and that is something the president has been criticized for. so it is a message to their base voters than it is trying to send a message to iran. irans said this might be a public relations stunt so i don't know if it is undermining negotiations as it is a public relations stunt. what is potentially more dangerous than isis? isis merging with another terrorist group. the islamic state and what it means for the rest of us. that is up next. it's one of the most amazing things we build and it doesn't even fly. we build it in classrooms and exhibit halls, mentoring tomorrow's innovators. we build it raising roofs, preserving habitats and serving america's veterans. every day, thousands of boeing volunteers help make their communities the best they can be. building something better for all of us. sunday dinners at my house... it's a full day for me, and i love it. but when i started having back pain my sister had to come help. i don't like asking for help. i took tylenol but i had to take six pills to get through the day. so my daughter brought over some aleve. it's just two pills, all day! and now, i'm back! aleve. two pills. all day strong, all day long. and now introducing aleve pm for a better am. in our house, we do just about everything online. and our old internet just wasn't cutting it. so i switched us from u-verse to xfinity. they have the fastest, most reliable internet. which is perfect for me, because i think everything should just work. works? works. works! works? works. works. a top u.s. general is warning the threat from isis is closer to home than we think. roughly 100 people from the caribbean have fled to join isis in syria. and there is little way of tracking them. and if they come back they could easily cross the border into the u.s., according to the pentagon. this is all the more troubling after news surfaced yesterday that isis has now accepted boko haram's pledge of allegiance combining the two deadliest terrorist groups in the world into one. but there is progress. iraqi forces have taken back most of the city of tikrit. the prime minister said it is only a matter of days before they rest full control back from isis. but most of the gains are made without help from the u.s. so what can we do to stop this from spreading. and joining us jessic ikica burger. and so talk to us about the gains made in tikrit. it is good that we are not being relied on entirely for the fight. >> i think king abdullah is right. the ground forces need to be muslims. preferably sunni muslims. and to the extent that locals can take care of the military ground force aspects of the problem, this is great. >> so boko haram, the big news this week, as they pledge their allegiance to isis and they are accepting that. why did they take a week to accept that? does that suggest there is trouble among the leaders in isis and what does this mean for this new phase of isis 2.0? >> it is good for both organizations. it means money for boko haram, it means more prestige for boko haram and more prestige for isis. it is showing that isis is spreading its caliphate and even if we succeed in taking it down in iraq and syria or say mosul gets taken back as it is being predicted, isis is not just a state, it is an idea a terrorist group, it is a multi-pronged organization. >> let's talk about the internal workings of isis which are mist mysterious to more americans. you talk about connections to al-nusra and others and are there still tensions within isis and if there are, what are the tensions around in? >> honestly i don't know what the tensions are. if there are, we can find them. >> and we had j.m. in yesterday and we say why would anybody join this group. they are going to lose and be killed but you point out this group is not many different than the fundamentalist groups in this work. you write that joining this group is about the sim livication of life and thought, good and evil are brought out in stark relief and life is transformed through martyrdom. so joining this group makes your life simpler? >> it does. it is clear who the enemy is and who the alleys are. good and bad are so clear. and i do think spiritually. >> we have to admit there is an appeal to knowing what is good what is evil. it is so simple. >> and jessica, talk about the ideology. they are driven by the apocalyptic and end-times story they are telling about. tell us about what they believe they are part of in terms of historical trajectory and how we can exploit that in the fight against isis. >> that was the biggest strike to me. i've studied apocalyptic groups and i didn't understand the rule in which they buy into this. the quran is not an apocalyptic book but they pulled together their own narrative. based on christian and partly even on flying saucer stories and it is a cobble put together on sunnis that they may witness the mod in their life time. >> this is to them, the final battle while they are calling the rest of the world, who they refer to as rome to come and fight here and this is the and and that is why we have to learn to deal with them. >> it is a sectarian final battle and they are fighting she shiite shiites, and also in rome and to fight with them in dhabi, which is where they believe the final battle will take place. >> thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having me. and another american infected with ebola and others possibly exposed. >> and plus dangers next neighbors we drone, possibly peeping in your window. how does that sound? >> not good. the question i get the most is probably do you feel fear? what's the closest you've ever come to death? they're boring. i have a website because i need a way to put myself forward in my own way. this is my story and this is how i want to share it with people. i'm alex honnold and this is my squarespace. ♪ building aircraft, the likes of which the world has never seen. this is what we do. ♪ that's the value of performance. northrop grumman. many wrinkle creams come with high hopes, but hope... doesn't work on wrinkles. clinically proven neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair with the fastest retinol formula available, it works on fine lines and even deep wrinkles. you'll see younger looking skin in just one week. stop hoping for results, and start seeing them. rapid wrinkle repair... ...and for eyes rapid dark circle repair. from neutrogena®. toenail fungus? don't hide it... tackle it with fda-approved jublia! jublia is a prescription medicine proven to treat toenail fungus. use jublia as instructed by your doctor. once applied jublia gets to the site of infection by going under, around and through the nail. most common side effects include ingrown toenail, application-site redness itching, swelling, burning or stinging, blisters, and pain. tackle it! ask your doctor now if jublia is right for you. just because other stories have been dominating the news does not mean ebola has gone away. the national institute of health has been treating a nurse treating ebola and that person was brought back overnight and a second person is under observe. tom costello what do you have? >> we don't know whether it is a man or a women, we know they were working at sierra leone, at that location a hot zone for ebola, somehow came in contact with ebola and contracted ebola. so that person arrived overnight on a charter flight to the n. >> h. i.h., the premier institute of dealing with contagious diseases and they are in a containment unit and under aggressive medical care. second to that as you mentioned, the concern is that that individual may have exposed other colleagues in west africa as well to ebola. none of them has shown any symptoms and so they are watching them in west africa. but then in addition one individual, one health care worker who is an american has been transported or being transported via charter plane to atlanta where he or she will be isolated but not in a hospital. they are close to emory university but at the moment they are not showing any symptoms at all either so they will watch them closely at home. so this has been as you know a very serious concern about ebola which we were reporting on heavily back in the fall. it thankfully has not turned out to be the global pandemic we feared back in the fall. as you know you can get it only through direct contract through blood and secretion and have to have direct contact with blood after them asymptomatic. and at the moment it is horrific that 10,000 people in we have africa have died. but it is 10,000 and not 100,000 yet and the biggest areas of begin are guinea and sierra leone. in the rural areas, not so much liberia right now. >> so with 10,000 people dead where the infection level is high, has there been progress? >> there is progress across africa. if you talk to infectous disease experts, they say it is infection of the body and it ravages the body and in order to survive it you need immediate and aggressive care and we can offer that in the united states and europe. it is much more difficult on the ground in west africa. so they are trying to advance those types of techniques to those countries. but in addition trying to urge them to undertake very simple steps. for example, quarantining everybody that looks sick and washing their hands. and they have burials that might not be appropriate when you are trying to stop an epidemic. so they are making tremendous progress and greater progress than they thought they would back in the fall but still a very deadly disease and one american at the n.i.h. being treated. and i should stress and this is important, that is now the 11th person in the united states to be treated for ebola. of those 11 nine were americans. all of those so far, all of those people have survived. only two people in the united states have died and both of those were individuals who were first in africa then came to the united states and sought treatment in u.s. hospitals and it appears they came too late. >> indeed. good to remember. tom costello. thank you very much. ebola is a threat to our world. but technology is making it easier for man-made things more frightening. it threatens to give every individual with a modern education and technology the ability to have catastrophic damage. imagine billions of people walking around with nuclear weapons in their pockets. >> that sounds awesome. for more we have benjamin wittes a very interesting and frightening book. how wide spread is massive offensive capability and how wide spread is it now and in the near feature? >> right now, as you see, in the cyber arena, where cyber attacks against individuals, country sies, corporations are a big event. we don't see it widespread in the area of bio technology or with robotics. but i and my co-author gabby bloom don't see a reason why those technologies and attacks with those won't proliferate as well. >> you talk about hackers of robots and clones and of all of these, what frightens you the most and why? >> for me the foirs frightening is the -- for me the most is frightening is the capacity mostly in the public domain and you can imagine based on current technology in which an individual -- a deranged individual or a small group, a terrorist group or just a millen arian cult will decide to make its own weapon of mass destruction. there are some technical barriers but unfortunately it is very doable and that is a potentially catastrophic turn of events. >> that is obviously frightening and it reminds me in your book you talk about a contract and that we agree to follow basic rules in return for security from the state and how does that affect how we will interact with each other and with our government in regards to that social -- contact. >> that is a good question. and how do you govern a world in which anyone can attack anyone anywhere. in which borders don't matter and distance protect you and you can't see your attacker and you can't confront your attacker. and the enlightment era spherist of the state had a way of giving the individual protection. we give up some little piece of the liberty to the sovereign who governs us when they promise to protect us. and one of the things we won fronted as we were working on this, what if their promise to protect us doesn't hold any more. what if states can't capable of shielding you any more from the threats of your radically empowered fellow citizens and that took us as in the book challenges us to the very powerful underpinnings. >> thank you for joining us and congratulations on the book. so next business can be dirty stuff but don't worry there will also be pie. confused? 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don't be modest. i see how you've been investing. setting long term goals. diversifying. dip! you got our attention. we did? of course. you're type e* well, i have been researching retirement strategies. well that's what type e*s do. welcome home. taking control of your retirement? e*trade gives you the tools and resources to get it right. are you type e*? and an update on the s.a.e. fraternity chapter at oklahoma university accused of making the racist chands. an alumni is holding a press conference right now. >> all of us agree that the actions which led to this matter at the university of oklahoma are inexcusable. let me be year there is no justification for what occurred. zero. we are interested, where needed to act to protect the due process rights the first amendment rights and the 14th amendment rights of the members. >> and we will of course keep you updated as this updates. and now a check of the markets. red across the board mostly on lower oil prices but stocks change in a flash. just like the business world itself. and since our next guest first published his go-to guide called the art of the state a decade ago, social media has replaced p.r. firms for ads and now with the cut-throat you can fund your own dream like sites like cut starts. and from the chief evangelist for google jay kawasaki. >> you should have made the trip down here today. it would have been worth it. >> i guess so. >> but guy, i want to talk about -- before we get to the pie, guy, you want to talk about the book and starting the business. you talked to a lot of people and everybody feels we have a good idea in us and we would all like to start something but the problem is it is intimidating and taunting and where do you find the money to start a project like this and get it off the ground and people lack the confidence. so what the key first step to getting something like this off the ground? >> so first of all my congratulations to your producer who wrote that copy. that was an excellent introduction. i've been introduced a lot of times on tv. >> it was improvised. >> i may have to get that script. thank you. in 2015 it is a completely different world for an entrepreneur. because social media is fast and free and ubiquitous. people don't have to rent office you don't have to use -- you use cloud-bases and much closer to everybody competing on an equal playing field. this will mean there are more start-ups and doesn't mean companies are all better but many more starting. the more companies that start, the more likely you are able to get a great company out of it. and it is so competitive today as you were saying. so beyond what you are trying to sell, what is the most important part of starting a business? is it who you surround yourself with or the branding or the p.r. or something not so obvious? >> the two start-up things is simple. you need to make it and sell it you i. e. app ingleapple. if you are the engineer you want someone who can sell it and if you are a sales person you better have an engineer better than you. so those two things are 90% of the action. >> guy i want to throw statistics at you as to who is starting businesses and getting funds. only 19% of angel funding is going to women and only 3% of total venture funding going to women and only 10% of high growth firms are women. women either seem to not be starting many businesses or not given the experience given your experience, what is happening here? >> most men are stupid. that is a cogent explanation for that. let's just cut to the chase here. one of the beauties of this brave new world, 2015 is if you are doing something with indy go go or kick starter and not pitching rich old, white men in venture capital firms it is a different world. so part of the crowd funding and the need for less capital is that gender race plays a small part. the trend is our friend. >> guy, no matter how technology advanced we get, you have to be a good guy to get people to work with you. >> or girl. >> or women. >> see, another stupid man. >> i resemble that remark. >> but the last chapter is the art of being a mench. what does it meanmensch." >> it's a very difficult term to describe because it's difficult to translate that word. mensch is a person who is trusted, who sees the big picture, sees the long picture, someone that you would entrust with your kmcompany, your kids whatever, and that kind of person is what an entrepreneur should strive to be. at the end of your life would you rather be called a billionaire or mensch? i prefer mensch because it means you made the world a better place. >> i believe it's a yiddish word for anyone wondering at home. guy cawkawasaki thank you for your time. now to the pies. >> they smell so good in here. >> tomorrow 3/14 is national pi day celebrating the mathematical ratio, 3.1415 blah, blah, blah. hill city is famous for a different kind of pi spelled p p-i-e. new flavor suggested by diners and the new flavor is drum roll please sweet tea pie. >> wow! >> now we get to eat some. >> bon appetit. >> bon appetit. >> lemon merengue. i'm sampling the sweet tea. >> with a fork? why are we -- >> yes. >> why are we using a fork. >> they're beautiful. they look delicious. >> crystal, we were talking about our favorite pies earlier in our office and yours -- >> this is actually really good. >> i'm definitely cocoa cream pie girl when done well. i think it's absolutely the best that you've brought. >> mine is lemon merengue. >> i would go to marie calendars my dad would bring a whole pie every sunday so i love a fresh lemon merengue pie. >> this has chocolate chips underneath this which is great. >> blake do you feel weird? >> if it you want to eat pies what ever it might be. >> i'm going to save some of this for you. >> sweet tea? >> very good and excuse me if you don't live here you can order these tasty pies online thanks to hill country for helping us mark pi day and we'll take a quick break to eat more of this. >> eat the pie. >> and crystal will rant on her highlight of the week when we come back. >> pie? >> two years ago, tom young and ian schaeffer went to southwest to pitch yably. it failed to gain traction but they were nimble pivoted and turned their company into poachable, a job hunting site that's working. for more watch "your business" sunday mornings at 7:30 on msnbc. american express for travel and entertainment worldwide. just show them this - the american express card. don't leave home without it! and someday, i may even use it on the moon. it's a marvelous thing! oh! haha! so you can replace plane tickets, traveler's cheques, a lost card. really? that worked? american express' timeless safety and security are now available on apple pay. the next evolution of membership is here. you wouldn't do half of your daily routine. so why treat your mouth any differently. brushing alone does less than half the job leaving behind millions of germs. complete the job with listerine®. kill up to 99 percent of germs. and prevent plaque, early gum disease and bad breath. complete the job with listerine®. power to your mouth™. also try listerine® floss. its advanced technology removes more plaque. it's one of the most amazing things we build and it doesn't even fly. we build it in classrooms and exhibit halls, mentoring tomorrow's innovators. we build it raising roofs, preserving habitats and serving america's veterans. every day, thousands of boeing volunteers help make their communities the best they can be. building something better for all of us. hard right conservative and potential losing presidential candidate ted cruz said something that totally blew my mind this week but maybe not in the way you might expect. here is cruz borrowing from john edwards' famous progressive populous rhetoric about two americas. >> we've seen over the past number of years two americas emerge. at the very top, the top 1% today with the largest federal government we've ever had, the top 1% earn a higher share of our income than any year since 1928. for the rich and powerful big government has been a good deal but working men and women across this country are hurting. >> wow. ted cruz lamenting in equality and talking up two americas i never thought i'd say that day. inequality was once the rallying cry of the fringe occupy movement and it's become such a central concerned you'd be hard-pressed to find some republican to at least rhetorically address the issue. now that the top line numbers in our economy, the stock market job creation the unemployment rate are back at a decent level, it's become increasingly clear that even when our economy is doing okay millions of american citizens working in that economy are not doing okay. how do we change our labor, tax and spending to bring back the american dream? that is the central question for the 2016 election and let's be honest. even the most serious of republican candidates jeb bush has almost nothing substantial to say on the topic. the only solution we've really heard so far is to take dollars away from our public schools to hand out school vouchers to students. i had the opportunity on krystle clear to speak with thomas pecetti and i asked him about jeb's plan and he was none too impressed. >> it doesn't seem to invest in education. he just wants more competition, much of a system where there's limited evidence that this is working and i think most of all what we need is to put more public resources into the education system so you cannot see that we're going to keep cutting tax for this group and at the same time that you can close the education gap. so the education gap is really serious but they cannot do at the same time cut taxes on the rich. >> i've seen a lot of talk about the supposedly weak bench that the democrats have and the supposedly strong bench that the republicans is. that's a bunch of nonsense. forget about the candidates. here's what we should be talking about. there is only one party that has anything logical, data-driven, real to say about the most pressing concern that is facing this country, the massive growing gap on opportunities and outcomes between the rich and everyone else. that's what this campaign will be about, not the mini scandals not the drama, not the bench. who's got a plan that will help make the lives of ordinary people better? who weenton't just talk about two americas but work to reunite the divided pieces? that choice is already clear. that does it for "the cycle." "now alex wagner" starts right now. will an isis loss be a win for iran? dramatic new video from the marathon bombing trial and democrats are asking if not hillary, then who? first a police shooter in ferguson is still on the run as protests over racial bias continue. it's friday march 13th and this is "now." >> the city's on edge. >> no justice. >> no peace. ♪ >> the manhunt continues. >> dozens of people held a candlelight vigil for the wounded officers. >> i think that what had been happening in ferguson was oppressive and objectionable, but there was no excuse for criminal acts. >> even while there's been a leadership change those police officers are still here in this community and that's not lost on the protesters. >> rudy giuliani now weighing in. he brought up officer darren wilson. >> police officers should be commended for what he did. >> uses commended, someone did lose their life. >> we were right, this hands up don't shoot story was a

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