status territory as the country plummets towards default. it shut its banks in at least a last-ditch effort to prevent collapse. will it work that s the question and folks there now only allowed to actually withdraw 60 euros, about $67 from their atms daily. joining me now charles payne, host making money with charles payne on forth fox business network. very scary that the people in greece are being controlled by this and the amount of money they can pull out of the atm. what do you make of the downgrade on the rating? not surprising. to your point it s deeper junk. greece has been in trouble for a long time. we ve heard echoes of this for the last five years. the deadline knew it was cominging, hardball negotiating and i think they had a feeling that somehow they would win this thing and they are not. they are losing big time. even though 60 euros is a gift from europe from the rest of europe that s a gift. if they pull that where are they going to be? now all of a sudden the pri
hours, something that s not very easily explained, wolf. the suspicion being someone deliberately made all those turns, changed the altitude and all of the rest. barbara, thanks very much. let s take a closer look now at the suggestion that the airliner s captain deliberately redirected the plane and that the crash was no accident. that s at the heart of a new article just reported in usa today. and i m joined now by the paper s world news editor, william dermotty along with former assistant fbi director tom fuentes and our cnn aviation analyst miles o brien. william, thanks very much for cominging in. let s talk a little bit about this report that you have. tell us specifically what usa today is reporting. that investigators who have been on this since day one are telling our reporter on the ground at kuala lumpur that they re focusing solely on the pilot as the reason for the disappearance of the 777.
cycling like bruce springsteen in the 70s and 80s s shts keep cominging the new jersey committee investigate the lane closures behind closed doors preparing more subpoenas. also figuring out what to do with the two key players in all of this who refuse to comply with previous subpoenas. busy watching the olympics, you miss it the editorial board at the star ledger now says it regrets their 2013 endorsement of the man saying, quote, yes, we knew christie was a bully. who didn t know his crew was crazy enough to put people s lives at risk in ft. lee and use hurricane sandy aid as a political slush fund and didn t know don zimmer sitting on a charge of extortion. the childist memo attacking david wildstein?
government. i d like to chime in there. my biggest concern after my dad was released and continues until today is that these policies are continuing to exist. and it s not so much that my dad was a victim of the government s policies, but i like to say he was symptomatic of the sort of policies we have now. so if it can happen to him it can happen to others. it may be and we don t know about it. until our fourth amendment rights is restored i m not going to be satisfied with just an apology. i have to see actions taken to show this will never happen again to anyone. thank you, sharia, brandon, we re out of time for this. cominging up since i m hammered by libertarians i ll explain why i m less bothered by the nsa than i am about other things on this horrible list. my list of 100 nasty things government does.
killed. and is that bad? well, no, i think they ve been given a chance. and the people that have served there have done a good job. they have tough neighbors, the taliban is going to try to come back in, is it going to be a smooth path for them? no, but they had elections, they picked a president, and the country s vastly better off. the taliban we re using the soccer state yuchl stadiums the using to cut off people not to play soccer. is it perfect? no. in rumsfelds rules, what rule would you have for me? well, i thought about that cominging over here. and i put down that the art of listening is indispensable to the right use of the mind. it s also the most generous, the most open, and the most appealing of human habits. and you are in a position where you have to do that. and that was from the dean of