0 somewhat mixed. i came close to losing it. trayvon martin could have been me. it didn t happen to obama. it s individuals speaking about a subject they know nothing about. white guilt is one of the dominating factors in american politics. it s individuals speaking about a subject they know nothing about. where does the country go from here? it s not just the trayvon martin verdict. the leadership of this republican supermajority, as if. today marks the 12th straight week of moral monday protests. in north carolina it s moral monday. outside north carolina s state capitol in raleigh this photo i.d. is very harsh. the focus will be a harsh new voter i.d. bill. it s one of the harshest photo i.d. bill we ve seen. the moral monday movement is actually more popular. we can t solve this problem in a day or a week. we re going to find them every day we can. it s going to take a very, very long time. first we want to go to london. we continue to fo
0 this language is moving around a lot, kari. now, how do you contrast what we heard from rush limbaugh to what i think is a rather remarkable silence from congressional republicans who for those of us who cover the hill, you get a statement on naming a post office, you get a press release on their response to a response to obama care and a rerepeal. nothing from most of them so far. i mean, there s a vacuum of commentary that s productive from the extreme right of the republican party and even from some moderate republicans. i think we look at the speech president obama gave last week. what we see is a speech that at least is touching on foundational issues that are important to this country. so when rush limbaugh talks about the civil war, you know, this historic reality of race and war that created this country, today we have other structural issues we re looking at. the criminal justice system. disconnected young people. educational opportunity. jobs. these are foundational issue