the country. people are very engaged and they are involved. if you look at the 2010 election it was mentioned that the tea party movement was very influential. i think they will be very influential in 2012 as well. jenna: there has been still a lot of blame going around, matt. i like to listen to the head of the dnc talking in new hampshire. she was talking about political discourse in washington overall since, basically this period of the financial crisis. take a listen to what she has to say. i hesitate to place blame but i have noticed it take a very precipitous turn with, towards edginess and lack of civility with the growth. tea party movement. what the tea party has done, they have taken it to a different level and so when they come and disagree with you, you re not just wrong. you re the enemy. jenna: matt, i hear what you re saying about this being local movement and really something from the ground up. that is a woman with a
rez that its in a state that has experienced unemployment above 9% for the past three years. but each candidate is really hoping to consolidate the anti-romney vote. but until one does, these candidates run the risk of potentially fracturing that vote and giving the advantage to the front runner. so you re going to see a lot of active campaigning in this state leading up to the primary on the 21st. back to you. jon: jonathan serrie in blythe woods, south carolina. you making any recommendations there at the lizard s thicket, jonathan? guess he can t hear me. east that or he either that or he hasn t checked out the menu today. jonathan serrie, thank you. jenna: i m sure he just didn t hear. you d imagine reptile no, i m sure there s something better than that on the menu. jonathan was pointing out romney s rivals are rolling out much sharper attacks, and romney s shaping a new message moving his campaign from defense to offense. what that offense looks like
kelly: chocolate, dark chocolate. the problem is dark chocolate is good for you, but the problem is people don t eat during the the day. they go and don t eat until after sundown and crave and the new studies are showing that there s chemicals in the brain related that literally parts of the brain are lighting up, deep in the brain and you have the same with addicts. it s a form of addiction, seratonin, a neural chemical is involved and you can t stop it without changing your behavior, maybe anti-depressants and it s serious and people have been joking about this for year, over 3 million people are affected by this. a lot of them are people that have dietary problems to begin with, trying to lose weight or on a crazy diet or not exercising enough. it becomes a problem where it s repetitive and you can t break the cycle. jamie: separate from the medication, if we eat breakfast is that going to change anything, if you re in the habit of going to the brim late at night. it might
collapse in the next few days. of course, when we talk about pakistan we talk about afghanistan. many pakistanis are deeply angry over the military presence in the region. here to help us wade through this mess and what it may mean for u.s./pakistan relations is cnn s own foreign affairs expert, fareed zakaria. fareed, thanks for joining us. pleasure. simple question, is pakistan s government going to fall? it might, but it doesn t matter. because what you re talking about is the civilian democratically elected government, which doesn t actually run the country. the pakistani military runs the country, particularly on the crucial issues of national security, internal issues relating to terrorism. on those issues, the structural authority and command remains pretty clear. even if you do have this parliamentary coalition collapsing, what will most likely happen is there will be a re-grouping of some form of you know, there will be a new set of alliances made, a new prime mini
for u.s./pakistan relations is cnn s own foreign affairs expert, fareed zakaria. fareed, thanks for joining us. pleasure. simple question, is pakistan s government going to fall? it might, but it doesn t matter. because what you re talking about is the civilian democratically elected government, which doesn t actually run the country. the pakistani military runs the country, particularly on the crucial issues of national security, internal issues relating to terrorism. on those issues, the structural authority and command remains pretty clear. even if you do have this parliamentary coalition collapsing, what will most likely happen is there will be a re-grouping of some form of you know, there will be a new set of alliances made, a new prime minister probably comes into office. but it won t change that much on the ground. that is the question that was central, every time i was reading these articles. the military controls the nukes. and there s a civilian government separate