yes, the brotherhood was not very democratic often. but killing hundreds of people is not very democratic either. right. no, it s terrible. we should we should stress that. and if the brotherhood had look, the brotherhood would have acted in the same way. we saw there was a clear tendency in the way the morsi administration had been conducting itself until the point it was deposed. it s not for nothing that 14 million people came into the streets. on the whole, though, i think that this is one, and this might surprise you, this is one country and one area where the obama administration would be wise to the extent possible to follow a hippocratic do no harm, intervene less and speak less policy. which is pretty much what it s doing. and rightfully so. and so i think conversations about let s cut off aid are not helpful. let s have an inclusive process, it s not helpful. sometimes it be behooves the
three-page medical report from the family physician of accused killer george zimmerman, and it could become an important piece of evidence here because the day after martin was shot and killed, zimmerman visited his doctor. according to the records, he had a closed fracture of his nose and two black eyes, two lacerations to the back of his head, and a minor back injury as well. martin savidge is joining us live from the cnn center in atlanta. martin, these developments seem to bolster zimmerman s argument that he killed trayvon martin in self-defense. that could be argued in two different directions, zoraida. the attorney that represents the family of trayvon martin is going to say it it doesn t necessarily prove that because what we don t know, despite the medical information that s coming now out of the discovery documents and this is all the information that the prosecution is now bringing forward that they have filed and must make available to the defense team. this i
banking on the fact that many of them think he is that guy. but the polling and actual wins and delegate count don t really show that. i think santorum certainly has the better rationale for continuing and if it is gingrich and santorum splitting the conservative vote as it has been to some extent until now, that behooves romney. i m not sure that works for conservatives. gingrich is banking on nobody wants anybody to be pushed out of the race and that is argument he is making and a lot of conservatives are looking at it and not giving his strategy. jon: that is a bit of a echo what newt himself said, peter. he said him staying in the race is not bad for the republican party but it would be bad for mitt romney if he says in the race. is he right? well, i think clearly newt is the rodney dangerfield of the republican field right now and he is, you know, the fact of the matter is mary katherine is right. he is splitting the
true democracy, for true freedom of expression and true political rights and the real risk to that now is precisely old decrepit dictatorships like the mubarak regime cracking down and leaving people with no choice but a radical option and i think it s very much behooves us to get behind this movement in the arab world, for an unprecedented demand for freedom and democracy. you heard bob kagan there say an unprecedented demand for freedom and democracy. here s a map of the region and ivan said the internet is back up. theiss are the country, tunisia, egyptian, syria, yemen where we ve seen protests in recent day, obviously egyptian is the one that s continuing and also know from social networks there are others coming up in egyptian, for example, the internet back up. this facebook posting from a youth group talking about a demonstration to come in egyptian. in yemen today the president, president saleh said he would not run for re-election and his
had any personal conversations with speaker pelosi or some of the other leadership, steny hoyer and have they sort of said to you, look, why don t you just disappear with this conversation? well, i ll say this, that each of the leaders have spoken with me. i know they re talking to every member of the caucus. but in some ways, i feel a somewhat unseemly to be talking about their elections, when in fact, so many of our colleagues are coming back defeated from theirs. people who worked very hard, people who tried very hard to have their ideas incorporated in the agenda of this 111th congress and behooves us all to take a bit of a breath. a timeout for a few days to give our members a chance to talk about what they have just experienced. i have the highest regard for speaker pelosi, i don t think any member of that house could work harder or try harder to pass legislation or help her colleagues than speaker pelosi.