interconnections according to a recent government accountability office report but many investigators don t believe any such attempts could be successful. three baggage handlers are accused of trying to smuggle hups of pounds of marijuana across the country over the last three works. they worked at oakland international airport. they hid the drugs in backpacks and duffel bags. the bags were passed off the passengers waiting inside the terminal. 11 other people are also being charged. southwest airlines says it is cooperating with the investigation and does not tolerate any behavior that puts safety and security at risk. that s good to hear. that does it for me and way too early on this tuesday morning. let s bring in mika for a preview of what s coming up on morning joe. what do we have? well, reading a lot of the headlines right now. a new report questions the
especially for the veterans of the ferguson movement who have gone through all the confrontations, the nights after nights of tear gas. when they come to new york city or they come to washington, d.c. and see what many of them believe is a movement here getting permits, asking police to shut streets down. that s not what they re used to. that is that organization and those groups trying to mature. these seem to be the growing pains. yeah, although quiet honestly for many in part. that might be a suggestion that this is sustainable because of course unity is always false. there s always these interconnections. all of that said, the there are still some very key points of unity, clarity, what is this march ultimately all about? . reporter: exactly. now the organizers of the march against police violence and police abuses. they ve gathered the families of so many loved ones who have been killed by police. so it s supposed to be about all
because you re famous for talking to us about how there are interlocking oppressions, but the ways in which those interconnections have to get talked about so black women don t get marginalized. help us understand why it s important to do both. talk about black women suffering, at the same time talk about the reality that in the context of america, their lives are made marginal and therefore they re not taken seriously. michael, first of all, thank you for having me. you really articulated well when you pointed out that there is a connection. there s been a long-term connection between anti-racism, patriarchy in the black community and conservativism. that s what big about this story. we all know women in general have had a difficult time coming forward when they ve been subject to sexual abuse. the stigma sticks with them. but what beverly johnson pointed out, there s an additional pressure on african american women that basically says they
a period of years, not months. so the next version and the next generation of this malware will be much tougher to find. we discovered since we have had attacks on our infrastructure, our grid infrastructure in the past, it doesn t take much, given the interconnections here to knock an area out and then knock the whole country out. how close are they to doing something like that? we are so dependent on power, neil, if you hit that power, it s like a set of dominoes. it will cascade on to healthcare, on to transportation and banking and finance and our food supply. if you take out power, people s homes don t run, food spoils, you can t get emergency services, so you can pick a few things and shut done glen stations, people would still be okay with that. when you talk out critical things like power, it has a magnifying effect on the impact you can have, and then makes it easier to do bad things. what do we do in the interim? well, one of the things you have to this is something
turn your back on each other and, also, the interconnections over the economy. after all, the russians supplied a lot of oil to western europe and it s a very important economic tie that they have. france going aahead with a sale to warships to russia. what do you think when you hear people say we re in a new cold war? well, i think that s an exaggeration. that cold war was really just terrifying. because in that cuban missile crisis, we came within a hair s breath of actually getting into a nuclear exchange. no one feels that way now. you know, jake, i teach university students in the 60s i taught, schools were freed of the nuclear war. nowadays it s terrorism but not nuclear arms. let s give them a sense of what it was like to live under a threat of the nuclear war. it s americans describing